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The Faculty of Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS

Columbia University

Bulletin

1979-1980

Inquiries

POST OFFICE ADDRESS:

College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

TELEPHONE INQUIRIES:

Office of Admissions: (Area code 212) 694-3596 Office of Financial Aid: (area code 212) 694-4100

OTHER BULLETINS OF THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE: Human Nutrition

Nursing (including the Graduate Programs in Maternity Nursing, Psychiatric- Community Mental Health Nursing, and Pediatric Nursing) Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Continuing Education in the Health Sciences: Postgraduate Courses Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research Public Health

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Colun.b,aUni.ersny Bulletin (USPS 123820) . Volume 13 Number 14 - August 20, 1979

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The Faculty of Medicine College of Physicians & Surgeons

Columbia University Bulletin

1979-1980

Contents

Academic Calendar 3

Faculty of Medicine 5

College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals 18

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid 24

Statement of Nondiscriminatory Policies, 24. Application for Admission, 25. Registration, 26. Regulations, 26. Auditing Courses, 27. Fees, 28. Application for a Degree, 29. Requests for Transcripts, 29. Estimated Expenses, 30. Housing, 30. Financial Aid, 30. Student and Alumni Activities, 40.

Program of Instruction 42

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence, 42. Key to Course Numbers, 43. Summary of Curriculum, 43. Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses, 43. Major Clinical Year, 45. Special Programs, 47. University Program of General Education, 50. Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship, 50. Prizes and Awards, 51.

Postgraduate Programs 52

Departments of Instruction 54

Anatomy, 54. Anesthesiology, 55. Biochemistry, 58. Dermatology, 59. Human Genetics and Development, 61. Medicine, 62. Microbiology, 71. Neurological Surgery, 73. Neurology, 74. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 77. Ophthalmology, 81. Orthopedic Surgery, 84. Otolaryngology, 86. Pathology, 88. Pediatrics, 93. Pharmacology, 100. Physiology, 101. Psychiatry, 102. Public Health, 112. Radiology, 120. Rehabilitation Medicine, 123. Surgery, 126. Urology, 131.

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1979 134

Student Roster 137

Index 149

Academic Calendar, 1979-1980

Major Religious Holidays

For a statement of University policy on absence for the observance of religious holidays see Admission, Registration, and Expenses Attendance.

JUNE

25-29 Monday-Friday.* Registration, including payment of tuition and fees, for fourth-year students.

25 Monday, through July 6, Friday.* Registration, including payment of tuition and fees, for third-year students.

JULY

2 Monday. Academic year begins for tiiird- and fourth-year students.

4 Wednesday. Independence Day. Holiday for fourth-year students.

9 Monday. Major Clinical Year begins for third-year students.

AUGUST

1 Wednesday. t Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in October (see September 6).

20-24 Monday-Friday. Optional early registration for second-year students.

30 Thursday.' Registration, including payment of tuition and fees, for first-year students.

31 Friday.* Registration, including payment of tuition and fees, for second-year students.

SEPTEMBER

3 Monday. Labor Day. Holiday for third- and fourth-year students.

4 Tuesday. Academic year begins for first- and second-year students.

6 Thursday. Last day to file late applications for October degrees.

OCTOBER

24 Wednesday. Award of October degrees.

NOVEMBER

2 Friday. t Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in January (see December 7).

6 Tuesday. Election Day. Holiday for first- and second-year students.

22-23 Thursday-Friday. Thanksgiving holidays for first-, second- and third-year students.

DECEMBER

7 Friday. Last day to file late applications for January degrees.

'Students allowed to register after the period specified must pay a late fee. fStudents wfio apply after this date must pay a late fee.

4 ACADEMIC CALENDAR

22 Saturday, through January 6, 1980. Sunday. Vacation for first*, second- and third-year students.

JANUARY

11 Friday. First semester ends for first-year students.

14 Monday. Second semester begins for first-year students.

23 Wednesday. Award of January degrees.

FEBRUARY

18 Monday. Washington's Birthday. Holiday for first- and second-year

students.

18 Monday.* Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in May (see April 3).

MARCH

29 Saturday, through April 6, Sunday. Vacation for second-year students.

29 Saturday, through April 13, Sunday. Vacation for first-year students.

APRIL

3 Thursday. Last day to file late applications for May degrees.

9-10 Wednesday-Thursday. National Boards Part II for third-year students.

30 Wednesday. Dean's Day for Medical Student Research.

MAY

14 Wednesday. Columbia University Commencement and Convocation of

the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

26 Monday. Memorial Day. Holiday for first-, second, and third-year stu- dents.

31 Saturday, through June 11, Wednesday. Study period for second-year students. National Boards Part I (Tuesday, June 10 and Wednesday, June 11).

JUNE

6 Friday. Second semester ends for first-year students.

12 Thursday, through July 6, Sunday. Vacation for second-year students.

20 Major Clinical Year concludes for third-year students.

30 Elective curriculum begins for third-year students.

Dates of National Board Exams

Part I September 5-6, 1979

June 10-11, 1980

Part II September 25-26, 1979

April 9-10, 1980

'Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

The Faculty of Medicine

WILLIAM J. McGILL, Ph.D., L.H.D., LL.D. President of the University

MICHAEL I. SOVERN, LL.B. Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost of the University

PAUL A. MARKS, M.D. Vice President for f-Iealth Sciences

DONALD F. TAPLEY, M.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine

FREDERICK B. PUTNEY, Ph.D. Deputy Vice President for ffealth Sciences A dministra tion

JOHN A. FIORILLO, M.A. Assistant Vice President for Health Sciences Adminis- tration

BERNARD D. CHALLENOR, M.D. Associate Dean for Hospital Affairs and Acting Associate Dean for Public Health

HELEN F. PETTIT, M.A. Associate Dean (Nursing)

JOSE M. FERRER, M.D. Associate Dean for Postgraduate Education

FREDERICK G. HOFMANN, Ph.D. Associate Dean for Admissions

LINDA D. LEWIS, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs

NORMAN E. TOY, D.B.A. Associate Dean for Administrative Affairs

DOROTHY ESTES, M.D. Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs

INEZ E. KLINCK, B.A. Assistant Dean for Academic Administration

Executive Committee of ttie Faculty Council

Donald F. Tapley (chairman) Henrik H. Bendixen William J. Casarella John A. Downey

Glenda J. Garvey Michael D. Gershon Sylvia P. Griffiths Edgar M. Housepian Kermit L. Pines

David Schachter Fred G. Silva Henry M. Spotnitz Francis G. Symonds, Jr.

Faculty Council of the Faculty of Medicine

Maxwell Abramson Ronald A. Andree Ernest W. April 'Charles A. Ashley Endre A. Balazs Arthur Bank Ellen R. Batt 'Patricia Battin Robert S. Beekman

Henrik H. Bendixen Michael Bernstein Thomas J. Bigger, Jr. Louis S. Blancato Martin Blank Arthur D. Bloom 'Thomas A. Blumenfeld Stanley B. Braham Whitley A. Branwood

Marjorie A. Bredice Peter R. B. Caldwell Charles J. Campbell 'Robert E. Canfield William J. Casarella Bernard D. Challenor Noreen C. Clark Herbert 1. Cohen James W. Correll

'Nonvoting participant

6 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

William J. Davis John R. Denton 'Thomas F. Dillon John A. Downey Richard G. Druss I. S. Edelman Jack Eisert Dean L. Engelhardt Dorothy Estes Philip Feigelson Frieda Feldman Charles Felton Michel J. Ferin *Jose M. Ferrer Mieczyslaw Finster 'John Fiorillo 'Lee R. Frazier 'Gary Gambuti Alexander Garcia Glenda Garvey Margerite J. Gates Michael D. Gershon Harold S. Ginsberg Allen M. Gold Fred Goldman DeWitt S. Goodman Reba M. Goodman Ashby S. Grantham Lowell M. Greenbaum Carolyn P. Greenberg Sylvia P. Griffiths Barry J. Gurland 'Lloyd A. Hamilton, Jr. Holger H. Hansen Ronald L. Hanson Leonard C. Harber Brian F. Hoffman 'Frederick G. Hofmann 'Frank E. laquinta Douglas N. Ishii Jerome H. Jaffe Georgiana M. Jagiello Alfred Jaretzki III

Raphael Jewelewicz Philip M. Johnson Ira S. Jones Virginia Kanick Arthur Karlin Michael Katz Anne E. Kellett Lucie S. Kelly Donald W. King Thomas C. King 'Inez E. Klinck Abbie I. Knowlton Robert S. Krooth John K. Lattimer Mary M. L. Lee Richard U. Levine Paul Lo Gerfo William J. McGill 'Roger W. MacMillan Paul A. Marks Jost W. Michelsen 'Frank V. Mignogna Orlando Miller 'William F. Minogue Thomas Q. Morris Stanley J. Myers Martin Nash Robert S. Neuwirth Eladio Nunez Elliott F. Osserman Audrey S. Penn James M. Perel Benvenuto Pernis 'Ann S. Peterson Helen F. Pettit 'James A. Pierce Jane Pitt Peter J. Puchner 'Frederick B. Putney 'Robin Rankow Maurice M. Rapport Keith Reemtsma 'Richard A. Rifkind

Michael R. Rosen Stephen Rosenberg John Rosenberger John Ross Lewis P. Rowland 'Mae Rudolph 'Charles T. Ryder Edward J. Sachar David Schachter Edward B. Schlesinger William B. Seaman Michael L. Sheehy Fred Silva Anneliese L. Sitarz Michael I. Sovern Abraham Spector 'Sol Spiegelman Henry Spotnitz 'Mervyn W. Susser Francis C. Symonds, Jr. John V. Taggart Donald F. Tapley 'Joseph V. Terenzio 'Gerald E. Thomson Juergen Tonndorf 'Norman E. Toy Patricia Tretter Gerard M. Turino Raymond L. Vande Wiele Robert Walther Dorothy Warburton Lucy Warren Harvey J. Weiss 'Robert J. Weiss Arthur P. Wertheim Doris L. Wethers 'Walter A. Wichern, Jr. Philip D. Wiedel Joachim Wigger Alexander H. Williams 'Myron Winick Charles S. Young Earl A. Zimmerman

'Nonvoting participant

Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the Dean

Donald F. Tapley

(chairman) Maxwell Abramson

Charles A. Ashley Henrik Bendixen John H. Bryant

Charles J. Campbell Bernard Challenor Felix E. Demartini

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 7

John A. Downey Jose M. Ferrer Gary Gambuti Alexander Garcia Michael Gershon Harold S. Ginsberg Leonard Harber Robert E. Heinlein Brian F. Hoffman Frederick Hofmann Michael Katz R. N. Kerst

Donald W. King Robert S. Krooth John K. Lattimer William F. Minogue William L. Nastuck Helen Pettit Frederick B. Putney Keith Reemtsma Richard A. Rifkind Lewis P. Rowland Charles T. Ryder

Edward J. Sachar Edward B. Schlesinger William B. Seaman Sol Spiegelman P. R. Srinivasan John V. Taggart William F. Towle Norman E. Toy Raymond L. Vande Wiele Robert J. Weiss Edward Zegarelli

Committees

ADMISSIONS: Associate Dean Hofmann (chairman); Professors Bell, Bonner, Braham, Branwood, Brust, Donn, Downey, Dunton, Frantz, Gambino, Grantham, Grossbard, Harvey, Housepian, Jagiello, Jewett, Moore, Neuberg, Ortiz-Neu, Pierson, Puchner, Schachter (ex officio), Silverstein, Jeanne A. Smith, Spotnitz, Jeffrey A. Stein, Taggart, Dean Tapley (ex officio), Thornhill, Walzer; Rena Appel, Oheneda Boakye-Adjei, and Philip Roth (students).

CURRICULUM: Dr. Thomas Q. Morris (chairman); Professors Abramson, Bernstein, Bendixen, Branwood, Cain, Despommier, Dick, Fine, Garvey, Geller, Gershon, Ginsberg, Brian Hoffman, Legato, Maxman, Nicholson, Nocenti, Puchner, Rosenberg, Spotnitz, Wiedel, and Marianne Wolff; C. Lee Jones (ex officio) and Mitchell Schorow (ex officio); George Arzeno, Leslie Davidson, Ralph Boucher, Noel DeFelippo, Lisa DeAngelis, Paul Dolinsky, Khether Raby, Gary Sobelson (students).

POSTGRADUATE INSTRUCTION: Associate Dean Jose M. Ferrer (chairman); Professors Christy, Goldsmith, Herter, Malitz, Morgan, Ryder, Taggart, Gerald, Gerald E. Thomson, Alexander W. Young, Dean Tapley (ex officio).

Delegates to the University Senate

Henry Aranow Jennifer J. Bell Philip Feigelson Lowell M. Greenbaum Edgar M. Housepian A. Gregory Jameson Richard N. Pierson two student delegates

Joint Administrative Board

REPRESENTING COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: Katherine L. Auchincloss, Daniel F. Crowley, Carl W. Desch, Arthur B. Krim, Robert D. Lilley, Walsh McDermott, William J. McGill, and W. Clarke Wescoe

REPRESENTING PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL: John W. Brooks, Thomas H. Choate, Frederick M. Eaton, Harold H. Helm, Richard N. Kerst, Ralph F. Leach, Augustus C. Long, and Robert Winthrop

8 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

Administrative Staff

JOYCE STICHMAN, B.S. Assistant to the Vice President for Health Sciences MARY J. SULLIVAN, B.A. Assistant to the Dean BERNIS D. MOSS, Jr., M.S. Business Officer WENDY L. CAMPBELL, B.A. Financial Aid Officer

Officers Emeriti

J. BURNS AMBERSON. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

HENRY ARANOW, Jr. Lambert Professor Emeritus of Medicine

DANA W. ATCHLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

VIOLA BERNARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

STANLEY BRADLEY. Bard Professor Emeritus of Medicine

HAROLD W. BROWN. Professor Emeritus of Parasitology

GORDON M. BRUCE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

LESTER CAHN. Professor Emeritus of Oral Pathology

ARTHUR CARR. Professor Emeritus of Medical Psychology

ERWIN CHARGAFF. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

JOHN J. CONLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology

WILFRED M. COPENHAVER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

ANDRE F. COURNAND. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

DAVID COWEN. Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

GEORGE F. CRIKELAIR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

EDWARD C. CURNEN, Jr. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

ROBERT C. DARLING. Professor Emeritus of Rehabilitation Medicine

ELIZABETH B. DAVIS. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry

D. ANTHONY D'ESOPO. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

A. GERARD DeVOE. Harkness Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

ZACHARIAS DISCHE. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

HERBERT O. ELFTMAN. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

JOHN W. FERTIG. Professor Emeritus of Biostatistics

CHARLES A. FLOOD. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

GOODWIN L. FOSTER. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

CHARLES L. FOX, Jr. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology (in Surgery)

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 9

JACOB FURTH. Professor Emeritus of Pathology

ELIZABETH S. GILL. Professor Emeritus of Nursing

LEONARD J. GOLDWATER. Professor Emeritus of Occupational Medicine

HARRY GRUNDFEST. Professor Emeritus of Neurology

RUTH J. GUTTMANN. Professor Emeritus of Radiology

CUSHMAN D. HAAGENSEN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

MICHAEL HEIDELBERGER. Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry

PAUL F. A. HOEFER. Professor Emeritus of Neurology

GEORGE H. HUMPHREYS II. Mott Professor Emeritus of Surgery

HAROLD W. JACOX. Professor Emeritus of Radiology

MAXWELL KARSHAN. Professor Emeritus of Biocfiemistry

FORREST E. KENDALL. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LAWRENCE C. KOLB. Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

RAPHAEL LATTES. Professor Emeritus of Surgical Pathology

FERDINAND F. McALLISTER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

RUSTIN McINTOSH. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

RICHARD L. MASLAND. Merritt Professor Emeritus of Neurology

MEYER M. MELICOW. John L. Given Professor Emeritus of Urology

FREDERICK A. METTLER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

KARL MEYER. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LESTER A. MOUNT. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurological Surgery

MARGARET R. MURRAY. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

DAVID NACHMANSOHN. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

PHILLIP O. POLATIN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry

J. LAWRENCE POOL. Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery

HERBERT RACKOW. Professor Emeritus of Anesthesiology

HARRY M. ROSE. Borne Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

WILLIAM H. SEBRELL, Jr. Williams Professor Emeritus of Nutrition

BEATRICE C. SEEGAL. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

LAWRENCE W. SLOAN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

ALAN DeF. SMITH. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

HAMILTON SOUTHWORTH. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

WARREN M. SPERRY. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

DAVID SPRINSON. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

10 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

LEO SROLE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

HERBERT C. STOERK. Professor Emeritus of Pathology

FRANK E. STINCHFIELD. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

HOWARD C. TAYLOR, Jr. Rappleye Professor Emeritus of Obstetrics and Gynecology

CARMEN T. VICALE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurology

JULES G. WALTNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology

SHIH-CHUN WANG. Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology

SIDNEY C. WERNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

MAYNARD C. WHEELER. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

SAMUEL M. WISHIK. Professor Emeritus of Public Health (Public Health Practice)

ABNER WOLF. Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

JOSEPH ZUBIN. Professor Emeritus of Psychology

Columbia Presbi;terian Medical Center

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View of Bard Hall from Riverside Drive

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Martin Luther King, Jr., Pavilion, Harlem Hospital Center

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St. Luke's Hospital Center

Rooseuek Hospital

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Overlook Hospital

Helen Ha^ies Hospital

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center- Augustus Long Library

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is guided by the principle that medical education is university education. The acquisition of knowledge and skills is important in professional education, but far more vital is a profound understanding of the science, the art, and the ethic within which both knowledge and skill are applied. As a part of Columbia University, the College builds its curriculum, selects its officers of instruction, and marshals its enormous resources of equipment and clinical experience to develop in the student this understanding of medicine. Within the curriculum for the M.D. degree is the fundamental knowledge upon which later specialization is built, and from which the natural bent is discovered toward general or special practice, or toward research, teaching, or administration. The postgraduate programs of the College provide training in the specialties, help the graduate physician to keep abreast of new knowledge, and support the research from which the physician's knowledge develops.

Reservation of University Rights

This bulletin is intended for the guidance of persons applying for or considering application for admission to Columbia University and for the guidance of Columbia students and faculty. The bulletin sets forth in general the manner in which the University intends to proceed with respect to the matters set forth herein, but the University reserves the right to depart without notice from the terms of this bulletin. This bulletin is not intended to be and should not be regarded as a contract between the University and any student or other person.

History of the College and University

Columbia University began as King's College, which was founded in 1754 by royal grant of George II, King of England, "for the Instruction of Youth in the Learned Languages, and the Liberal Arts and Sciences." The American Revolution interrupted its program, but in 1784 it was reopened as Columbia College. In 1912 the title was changed to Columbia University in the City of New York.

King's College organized a medical faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the North American Colonies to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine. The first graduates in medicine from the College were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam, who received the degree of Bachelor of Medicine in May 1769, and that of Doctor of Medicine in May 1770 and May 1771, respectively. Instruction in medicine was given until interrupted by the Revolution and the occupation of New York by the British, which lasted until November 25, 1783. In 1784 instruction was resumed in the academic departments, and in December of the same year the medical faculty was reestablished. In 1814 the medical faculty of Columbia College was merged with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, which had obtained an independent charter in 1807. In 1860, by agreement between the Trustees of the two institutions, the College of Physicians and. Surgeons became the Medical Department of Columbia College; from that time on the diplomas of the graduates were signed by the President of Columbia College as well as by the President of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The connection was only a nominal one, however, until 1891, when the college was incorporated as an integral part of the University. Since September 1917, women have been admitted to the College on the same basis as men.

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 19

The Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center was opened in the spring of 1928, seven years after the establishment of a permanent affiliation between Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital. It consists of the following units: the divisions of the University Faculty of Medicine (the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the School of Nursing, the School of Public Health); the University School of Dental and Oral Surgery; the Presbyterian Hospital and its subdivisions; the New York State Psychiatric Institute; and the Washington Heights Health and Teaching Center.

The Medical Center occupies a plot of land given to Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital by Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness and Mr. Edward S. Harkness. It comprises about twenty acres extending from West 165th Street to West 168th Street and from Broadway to Riverside Drive and is readily accessible from all parts of the city. A map of the Medical Center is given on the inside back cover.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is at 630 West 168th Street between Broadway and Fort Washington Avenue in a seventeen-story building, each floor of which connects with the wards and services of the Presbyterian Hospital. The William Black Medical Research Building is a twenty-story building, containing research laboratories for the faculty members of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. It is connected with the College building and is located at 168th Street and Fort Washington Avenue. The Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, a twenty-story structure diagonally opposite the William Black Medical Research Building, opened its teaching, research, and library facilities in 1976.

Health Sciences Library

The Columbia University Health Sciences Library is housed in the Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, 701 West 168th Street. The four floors occupied by the library offer a comfortable atmosphere conducive to study, including such amenities as individual study carrels, group study and conference rooms, typing rooms, and a leisure reading lounge.

With more than 335,000 volumes and a staff of 34, the Health Sciences Library is one of the largest medical center libraries in the United States. It is well able to serve the needs of faculty students, and researchers in the health sciences disciplines. More than 3,000 periodicals are received regularly. An entire floor of the library has been designated as a media center and is equipped with a variety of audiovisual materials. In addition to traditional reference services, the library offers computerized literature searching on several data bases, including MEDLARS. A library handbook and other materials describing library services are available on request.

Other Columbia libraries, located on the Morningside campus, are open to all students and faculty who carry Columbia identification cards. The main collection is housed in Butler Library; special and departmental collections are housed in other buildings on the campus. Columbia students and faculty are also permitted access to the collections of Harvard and Yale Universities, under the auspices of the Research Libraries Group. Information about the Research Libraries Group can be obtained from the Health Sciences Library.

Student memberships in the New York Academy of Medicine Library (at 103rd Street and Fifth Avenue) are available for an annual fee. Applications for membership, which includes borrowing privileges, should be directed to the Academy Library.

Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research

The Cancer Research Center was established in 1973. In 1977 it was designated the Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research. The Center coordinates, integrates, and facilitates cancer research, education, and patient care in the Health Sciences Faculties of Columbia University and its affiliated hospitals in New York City Presbyterian, St. Luke's, Roosevelt, Harlem and Overlook in Summit, New Jersey. The Cancer Center

20 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

was organized to effect the efficient and cooperative use of all Center resources, maximize the dissemination of information among Center personnel, and facilitate the rapid translation of cancer research findings into programs for improving capabilities for the prevention of cancer and the care of patients with cancer. The Center is charged with the responsibility for research, education, and cancer-patient care by all health professionals.

The Institute of Cancer Research of Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, was established in 1911 with funds bequeathed to the University by George Crocker. It moved from its original quarters on 116th Street to the campus of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in 1938. The Institute and Center are fully integrated.

The Center is composed of five operational divisions: Basic Science Research, Clinical Research and Patient Care, Education, Cancer Control, and Administration.

Center for Community Health Systems

The Center for Community Health Systems is an interdisciplinary and interdepartmen- tal health services and health policy research and development center which enlists varied resources of the University, particularly those of the Faculty of Medicine and its affiliated hospitals, in a systematic attack on problems in the organization and delivery of health care, with a predominant, though not exclusive, focus on urban areas.

Institute of Human Nutrition

The Institute of Human Nutrition is an interdisciplinary unit whose mission is to study all aspects of nutrition that relate to human health. The Institute is organized into three primary divisions: Growth and Development, Nutrition and Metabolism, and Community Nutrition. Although each division conducts its own research program and offers its own program of instruction, these are highly integrated in order to achieve two basic goals: research in all areas of human nutrition and an integrated teaching program in areas of nutrition relevant to the physician and medical scientist.

To achieve this integration of purpose and at the same time allow for the specialization necessary for the best research and teaching, combined research projects between the divisions are under way, and joint seminars and courses involving faculty and students in all three divisions are conducted. Constant interchange of ideas is fostered through weekly combined staff conferences and special lectures which are open to the medical center community. Through its Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy, and postdoctoral programs, the Institute aims to train individuals for scholarly activities in university and research centers that are in the forefront of the movement to advance nutrition as a health science.

The facilities of the Institute include laboratories in the William Black Medical Research Center, and the Obesity Center and Nutrition and Metabolic Research Center at St. Luke's Hospital Center. The office of the Director and other administrative offices are located on the seventh floor of the Health Sciences Center.

International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction

The International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction was founded in 1965 with a grant from the Ford Foundation. Its primary purpose is to do research in the fields of biology, clinical investigation, and the social sciences relevant to the solution of the world population problem. A parallel objective is to study the many complications of the reproductive process affecting human welfare, such as infertility, endocrine disorder.

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 21

out-of-wedlock pregnancy, marital and other social problems. The Institute consists of the Center for Reproductive Sciences, including the divisions of reproductive biochem- istry, physiology, and reproductive morphology, and the Center for Population and Family Health, which includes the divisions of social and administrative sciences, family life services, clinical evaluation, and sexual behavior.

The office of the Center for Reproductive Sciences is at 630 West 168th Street, and the office of the Center for Population and Family Health is at Floor B-3, 60 Haven Avenue.

AHiliated Hospitals

The Presbyterian Hospital

Founded in 1868, the hospital joined with Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons to form the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, which opened in 1928. Under the terms of the affiliation with Columbia University, members of the hospital staff are appointed by the Board of Trustees of the hospital on nomination by the Trustees of the University. The Presbyterian Hospital has an overall capacity of 1,291 beds and 48 bassinets.

The hospital includes all of the individual units described below:

Presbyterian Hospital, the single largest hospital unit, has a total of 480 beds, which includes semiprivate and ward facilities for medical and surgical services, as well as for New York Orthopaedic Hospital, Squier Urological Clinic, and Sloane Hospital for Women.

The New York Orthopaedic Hospital opened as a dispensary in 1866 largely because of the interest taken in the care of the crippled by Theodore Roosevelt, father of the president of the same name. The hospital was located in its own buildings at 420 East 59th Street until December 1950, when it was moved to the fifth floor of the Presbyterian Hospital. Its capacity is 87 beds.

Squier Urological Clinic has facilities on the tenth floor of the Presbyterian Hospital and on the tenth floor of Babies Hospital. There are 63 beds.

Sloane Hospital for Women was built at West 59th Street and Amsterdam Avenue and presented to Columbia University by Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sloane in 1886. It now occupies two floors of the Presbyterian Hospital and one floor in Harkness Pavilion, providing inpatient facilities for 117 adult patients and bassinets for 48 infants.

Harkness Pavilion, erected when the Medical Center was established in 1928, is available for the accommodation of 354 private and semiprivate patients from various services.

Babies Hospital, founded in 1887, provides for general medical and surgical care of infants and children up to their late teens, and care for premature babies. The capacity of the hospital is 168. An outpatient department is maintained in Vanderbilt Clinic by the attending and house staff of the hospital.

Neurological Institute, one of the first nongovernmental hospitals in the country for the treatment of diseases of the nervous system, was founded in 1909. It moved from East 67th Street to the Medical Center in 1929. The Institute has a capacity of 237 beds, including 15 added in 1960 for psychiatric patients.

The Edward S. Harkness Eye Institute, opened in 1933, has complete facilities for the medical and surgical treatment of adults and children with diseases of the eye. Its capacity is 52. On January 1, 1940, the work of the Herman Knapp Memorial Eye Hospital was taken over by the Institute.

22 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

Vanderbilt Clinic was presented to Columbia University by the Vanderbilt family in 1888 and is the outpatient department for all the wards of all the units of the Presbyterian Hospital.

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital in Cooperstown, New York, is a rural hospital combining the characteristics of a university medical center with a dedication to the delivery of both primary health services to the local community and highly specialized services to a large referral area. The hospital has 186 beds and a staff of specialists who are all salaried and full time. In 1976 there were 108,303 visits to the Outpatient Department. The teaching program for house staff and students is a highly personalized one based on a team approach to medical care. Members of the staff conduct biomedical research and are interested in models for the delivery of health care to the community. The library is unusually extensive for a hospital of this size, with over 23,000 volumes and about 350 subscribed journals. Since 1947 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia, and currently about 60 students from Columbia elect programs at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital.

Harlem Hospital Center

Harlem Hospital Center, founded in 1887, is a general hospital of nearly 1,100 beds serving Central Harlem and environs, responsible for the care of approximately 400,000 people. The College of Physicians and Surgeons, through a contractual arrangement with the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, is responsible for all professional services in this hospital and nominates its entire professional staff.

This affiliation presents a unique opportunity for teaching students, interns, and residents in the traditional disciplines of medicine and provides increasing opportunities for involvement in community medicine.

The Helen Hayes Hospital

The Helen Hayes Hospital at West Haverstraw, New York, founded in 1900, is a 150-bed independent rehabilitation hospital with complete medical services, owned and operated by the state through the New York State Health Department. Since 1966 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia University. The medical specialties and allied health professionals are organized into disability units that provide comprehensive care through an integrated team approach, providing unique educa- tional opportunities for residents and allied health students. The hospital has 800 admissions and 6,000 outpatient visits a year. New patient facilities are under construction; the research building has been renovated and an active biomedical engineering unit developed.

Overlook Hospital

Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey, is a 540-bed suburban community hospital, founded in 1906, which became a teaching affiliate of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1975. It is a general, voluntary, nonprofit institution accommodating 20,000 inpatients and 100,000 outpatients each year. Overlook offers particularly strong training in family practice and primary care internal medicine and pediatrics through a program of broad-based clinical experience for graduate physi-

AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 23

cians. Outreach programs have been pioneered in alcoholism and other addictive illness, home-care-based hospice, and mobile intensive care utilizing paramedics.

St. Luke's Hospital Center

St. Luke's was established in 1850 and has been on Morningside Heights next to the main Columbia campus since 1896. It merged with Woman's Hospital in 1953, and today the hospital complex contains 870 beds, including 45 pediatric beds, 59 obstetric beds, and 50 bassinets. Approximately 23,000 patients are admitted yearly to the four major and eleven specialty services. The attending staff numbers 600 doctors; the house staff consists of 200 interns, residents, and fellows.

St. Luke's has maintained a teaching affiliation with the University since 1947, and in 1971 became a full University hospital. Under the terms of affiliation with Columbia, new members of the medical staff are appointed by the hospital's Board of Trustees only after such members receive appointments as officers of instruction at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of the University.

St. Luke's is recognized as a leader in such fields as heart surgery, kidney transplantation, artificial kidney treatments, and noninvasive diagnosis (ultrasound). The Hospital Center's clinically oriented research projects are involved in such areas as blood diseases, coronary artery disease, gastroenterology, obesity and nutrition (it is the site of the only federally funded obesity research center), pulmonary disease, renal transplant-immunology, and bioengineering. A medical library of 22,000 volumes is an integral part of the Hospital Center. St. Luke's is both a major referral institution and a community hospital. The more than fifty specialty and subspecialty clinics see 50,000 patients yearly (totaling approximately 200,000 visits); the Emergency Room is one of the busiest in Manhattan (75,000 visits annually). The Hospital Center also operates extensive community programs in alcoholism treatment, drug detoxification, and mental health.

The Roosevelt Hospital

The Roosevelt Hospital treated its first patient in 1871. It comprises 595 beds and bassinets. There are about 263,000 outpatient and emergency-room visits annually. The hospital is engaged in many research and teaching activities. A new research building containing 52,000 square feet of laboratory space for all departments was opened in 1973. The medical library contains 17,000 volumes and subscribes to 550 medical and technical journals. The hospital has been affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons since the early years of the century and in 1971 became a full University hospital. Under the terms of the affiliation with Columbia University, members of the hospital staff are appointed by the Board of Trustees of the hospital on nomination by the Trustees of the University. The hospital is actively engaged in community programs, as represented by its Children and Youth Program and by its Drug Addiction, Alcoholism, and many other outreach and community programs sponsored by the Departments of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Medicine, and Ambulatory Care.

New York State Psychiatric Institute

The Institute was built and is maintained by the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene. Through a contractual arrangement, it is affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The Institute's functions are to carry out research on the causes and treatment of psychiatric disorders and the education of those entering the mental health field. The Institute currently maintains twelve major research laborato- ries, a hospital, and a number of specialized outpatient departments providing diagnostic and treatment facilities.

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid

Entering classes are enrolled in the College in September of each year. The minimum requirement for admission is attendance for three full academic years at an approved college of arts and sciences. Most applicants present four academic years and a bachelor's degree, although these are not required. The composition of our entering classes indicates, however, that only a relatively small number of three-year students have been accepted in the past by our Committee on Admissions.

The college program must have included English, physics, biology, general chemistry, and organic chemistry (including laboratory), covering at least one academic year each. These requirements have been designated as mandatory not only by our faculty but by various state medical licensure boards as well; accordingly, appplicants cannot be excused from them. Courses in genetics and embryology will be useful but are not required. Students applying for admission must also have taken the Medical College Admission Test in the spring or fall of the year of application. The student may have concentrated in any area in the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, or arts but evidence of a balanced education, as well as demonstrated interest and ability in the natural sciences, is preferred.

Statement of Nondiscriminatory Policies

The University is required by certain Federal statutes and administrative regulations to publish the following statements:

Consistent with the requirements of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, as amended, and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R., the University does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the conduct or operation of its education programs or activities (including employment therein and admission thereto). Inquiries concerning the application of Title IX and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R. may be referred to the University's Equal Opportunity Office (402 Low Memorial Library, New York, N.Y. 10027, telephone 212-280-3554), or to the Director, Office for Civil Rights (Region II), 26 Federal Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10007.

Columbia University admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the University. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other University-administered programs.

Consistent with the requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and Part 84 of 45 C.F.R. , the University does not discriminate on the basis of handicap in admission or access to, or employment in, its programs and activities. Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified handicapped workers.

The University in addition desires to call attention to other laws and regulations that protect employees, students, and applicants.

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin in programs or activities receiving Federal financial assistance. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits employment discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. Executive Order 11246, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin and requires affirmative action to ensure equality of opportunity in all aspects of employment.

The Equal Pay Act of 1963 prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in rates of pay.

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 25

The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended, prohibits discrimi- nation in employment on the basis of age.

The Columbia University Senate on December 1, 1978, passed a resolution announcing its general educational policy on discrimination which reaffirms the University's commitment to nondiscriminatory policies in the above-mentioned catego- ries, as well as its policy not to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.

Section 402 of the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended, prohibits job discrimination and requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment (1) qualified Vietnam era veterans during the first four years after their discharge and (2) qualified disabled veterans throughout their working life if they have a 30 percent or more disability.

The University's Equal Opportunity Office has also been designated to coordinate the University's compliance activities under each of the programs referred to above.

Application Procedure

Application for admission must be filed on a special form obtained from the Admissions Office of the Faculty of Medicine. Applications should be submitted as promptly as possible, though they are accepted only for the next incoming class; requests for application forms may be submitted one year in advance of registration. The completed form must be accompanied by the application fee of $25. The fee helps to cover the cost of processing the application; it is therefore not returnable and is not credited toward tuition.

Applicants will be notified when their applications have been received. The Committee on Admissions, however, evaluates only completed applications, that is, those for which letters of recommendation have been received, along with MCAT scores and transcripts. Applicants will be notified, also, when their applications have been completed; if such notification is not received within sixty days after the date of the preliminary processing of an application, applicants should make inquiries at the Admissions Office to learn which items have not yet been received. Failure to receive letters of recommendation and transcripts is the most common cause of delay in the completion of applications.

If a personal interview is required in connection with the application, it will be requested by the Admissions Office.

Selection of Students

The Committee on Admissions devotes months to the task of selecting a class of 148 from a very large number of applicants. Obviously there will be many well-qualified students whom the College will not be able to accept. The Faculty of Medicine recognizes its obligations in the field of medical education and research not only to the local area but to the nation as well. Admission will not be offered to any applicant who has not been interviewed by one of the College's representatives. Impressions from such an interview, as well as scores on the MCAT and academic records, will be considered in selecting individuals for admission. Other selection criteria are listed below.

The Committee places great importance on the fact that the students have learned to think for themselves, to explore, to work hard under their own initiative, to consider alternatives and make decisions, and to develop a desire for a continuous program of self-education. In the selection of students, preference is given to those who, in the opinion of the Committee on Admissions, have shown high achievement in their college education, a mature sense of values, sound motivation, qualities of leadership, and ability to assume responsibility, and to those who have already given evidence that they are qualified to complete all requirements of our curriculum and to graduate as ethical, compassionate, and competent physicians.

26 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

The practice of medicine is both a science and an art, and to treat the patient as a whole person, the doctor must be a whole person. Students planning a career in medicine should be motivated toward becoming leaders in medical thinking, rather than technicians, because medical practice is both a private enterprise and a public responsibility. The liberal arts college offers the opportunity to prepare for a happier and more useful life of citizenship. Years of specialization lie ahead in a professional career, but the foundation of all advanced study is a broad liberal education, of which science is a part.

Admission to Advanced Standing

Only a very small number of vacancies occur during the medical course, and students can be accepted on transfer from other schools only when such vacancies do arise. Any student desiring to transfer from an accredited school of medicine to the upper classes of the College should communicate with the Admissions Office to learn if a vacancy exists.

Admission of Foreign Students

Applicants need not be citizens of this country but preferably should have received their premedical education at an accredited college or university in the United States or Canada. Applications may be submitted by individuals who have been educated elsewhere, but in the past the Committee on Admissions has had great difficulty in finding a satisfactory means of evaluating the caliber of education available in the many colleges and universities throughout the world. Likewise, the Committee will accept applications for admission to this school with advanced standing from individuals who have begun their medical education in schools outside the United States and Canada, but again it has usually been able to admit relatively few individuals either to an entering class or with advanced standing whose previous education has not been obtained in this country or Canada.

Registration

Before attending classes, each student must register in person at the Office of the Registrar during the registration period listed in the Academic Calendar. At registration a student provides the information required and pays tuition and fees. The Office of the Registrar, on the first floor of the Black Building, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.

All students will be asked to give Social Security numbers when registering in the University. Any who do not now have a number should obtain one from their local Social Security office well in advance of registration.

Regulations

According to University regulations, each person whose registration has been completed will be considered a student of the University during the term for which he or she is registered unless the student's connection with the University is officially severed by withdrawal or otherwise. No student registered in any school or college of the University shall at the same time be registered in any other school or college, either of Columbia University or of any other institution, without the specific authorization of the dean or

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 27

director of the school or college of the University in which he or she is first registered.

The privileges of the University are not available to any student until he or she has connpleted registration. Since, under the University statutes, payment of fees is part of registration, no student's registration is complete until the fees have been paid. A student who is not officially registered for a University course may not attend the course unless granted auditing privileges (see below). No student may register after the stated period without the written consent of the appropriate dean or director.

The University reserves the right to withhold the privilege of registration or any other University privilege from any person with unpaid indebtedness to the University.

Conduct

All members of the University community, its visitors and guests, are governed by the Rules of University Conduct, which apply to all demonstrations, including rallies and picketing, that take place on or at a University facility. It is the student's responsibility to be aware of all provisions, regulations, and procedures contained in the Rules. Copies are available in the Office of the University Senate, 406 Low Memorial Library.

Attendance

Students are held accountable for absences incurred owing to late enrollment.

Religious Holidays

It is the policy of the University to respect its members' observance of their major religious holidays. Officers of administration and of instruction responsible for the scheduling of required academic activities or essential services are expected to avoid conflict with such holidays as much as possible. Such activities include examinations, registration, and various deadlines that are a part of the academic calendar.

Where scheduling conflicts prove unavoidable, no student will be penalized for absence for religious reasons, and alternative means will be sought for satisfying the academic requirements involved. If a suitable arrangement cannot be worked out between the student and the instructor involved, students and instructors should consult the appropriate dean or director. If an additional appeal is needed, it may be taken to the Provost.

Auditing Courses

Degree candidates in good standing who are enrolled for a full-time program in the current term may audit one or two courses (except during the summer term) in any division of the University without charge by filing a formal application in the Registrar's Office (Black Building, Room 138) no later than September 14 in the autumn term and January 30 in the spring term. Applications require (a) the certification of the Registrar that the student is eligible to audit and (b) the approval of the dean of the school in which the courses are offered.

For obvious reasons, elementary language courses, studio courses, applied music courses, laboratory courses, and seminars are not open to auditors; other courses may be closed because of space limitations. In no case will an audited course appear on a student's record, nor is it possible to turn an audited course into a credit course by paying the fee after the fact. Courses previously taken for credit may not be audited.

28 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute for medical students, are subject to change at any time at the discretion of the Trustees.

Tuition, the student health service fee, and the health insurance premium are payable in advance and as part of registration. (If the student chooses to pay tuition in two installments, one half of the tuition is payable at registration in September and the other half is payable in January.) If these fees are paid after the last day of registration (see the Academic Calendar) they will not be reduced, and a late fee of $25 will be imposed. Checks for tuition and fees should be made payable to Columbia University.

Tuition

For the full course in medicine for one academic year (or the equivalent), payable in two installments $5,800.00

Health Service and Hospital Insurance Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute, are subject to change at the discretion of the Trustees. For all full-time students, per year (September 1 -August 31)

Health service fee $215.00

Hospital insurance premium 157.00

The student health service fee contributes to the cost of operating the Student Health Service. The hospital insurance fee pays the annual premium to the Associated Hospital Service of New York. Participation in these programs is compulsory for all full-time students; students who already carry hospital insurance, however, will be charged the health service fee only. Proof of comparable coverage must be shown at the time of registration. Upon payment of additional fees, students can acquire hospital insurance coverage for their dependents and the latter are eligible to receive the benefits of the health service program. Students should consult the Office of the Registrar, Black Building, Room 138, for further information on dependent coverage.

The Student Health Service, which holds daily office hours, is on the street level of Bard Haven Tower 1 (60 Haven Avenue).

Application Fees and Late Fees

For admission $25.00

For late registration: minimum charge 25.00

For late application, or late renewal of application, for a degree 25.00

Withdrawal and Adjustment of Fees

A student in good academic standing who is not subject to discipline will always be given an honorable dismissal if he or she wishes to withdraw from the University. Withdrawal is defined as the dropping of one's entire program in a given semester as opposed to dropping a portion of one's program.

Any student withdrawing must notify the Registrar in writing: failure to attend classes or notification of instructors does not constitute formal withdrawal and will result in failing grades in all courses. Any adjustment of the tuition that the student has paid is reckoned from the date on which the Registrar receives the student's written notification. Application fees, late fees, and special fees are not refundable.

ADMISSION. REGISTRATION. EXPENSES. AND FINANCIAL AID 29

Up to and including the second Saturday after the first day of classes, tuition will be retained in the following amount:

Full-time study Part-time study

$50.00 25.00

After the second Saturday after the first day of classes in the term, the above amount is retained, plus an additional percentage of the remaining tuition (as indicated in the schedule below), for each week, or part of a week, of the term up to the date on which the student's written notice of withdrawal is received by the Registrar.

Adjustment Schedule

Second Saturday after first

day of classes Week following second

Saturday after first day

of classes Second following week Third following week Fourth following week Fifth following week Sixth following week Seventh following week Eighth following week

Minimum

Fees

Retained

$25 or

$50

25 or

50

25 or

50

25 or

50

25 or

50

25 or

50

25 or

50

25 or

50

25 or

50

Percentage of

Remaining Tuition

Retained

0

10 20 30 45 60 75 90 100

[no adjustment)

Application or Renewal of Application for a Degree

Degrees are awarded three times a year in October, January, and May. A candidate for any Columbia degree (except the Ph.D. degree) must file an application with the Registrar, 630 West 168th Street. In the 1979-1980 academic year, the last day to file for an October degree is August 1; for a January degree, November 2; and for a May degree, February 18. A late fee of $25 will be charged after these dates and until the expiration of the late filing period for each conferral date (September 6 for October degrees, December 7 for January degrees, April 3 for May degrees.) Applications received after the late filing period will automatically be applied to the next conferral date.

If the student fails to earn the degree by the conferral date for which he or she has made application, the student may renew the application. A $25 late fee will be charged for late filing of renewals of application according to the same schedule as for original applications (see above.)

Requests for Transcripts

Transcripts may be requested by writing to the Office of the Registrar, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032. Official transcripts must be sent by the University directly to an official address such as another university, a hospital, a business firm, or a government agency. However, a student may request an unofficial transcript (stamped "Student Copy"). There is a charge of $2 for each transcript requested except for those which are sent between offices of Columbia University. Checks accompanying transcript requests should be made payable to Columbia University.

30 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

Estimated Expenses

Current educational expenses for a student attending the College during the first academic year axe as follows:

Tuition $5,800.00

Health and Hospitalization Insurance Fees 372.00

Books and supplies 650.00

Microscope rental cost and other equipment 450.00

In addition to the educational costs listed above, each first-year student should budget approximately $4,140 to cover housing ($1,375), food ($1,900), clothing, laundry and dry cleaning ($265), and miscellaneous expenses ($600).

There are differences in the length of each academic year, and living and miscellaneous expenses vary. Each year the College Committee on Financial Aid prepares a statement of estimated expenses for students in each year of the medical school curriculum. These statements are given to all financial aid applicants at the time of distribution of the financial aid policy statement.

Microscope, Instruments, and Books

Students are required to have microscopes for courses in the first and second years of medical school. A microscope rental service is operated by the Medical Center Bookstore. For students who wish to purchase a new or used microscope, the faculty recommends a binocular instrument of standard make, complete with carrying case, built-in illuminator, and quadruple nosepiece (4X, lOX, 40X, and lOOX oil-immersion objectives).

Students are required to purchase dissection equipment for the first-year course in gross anatomy and instruments for the diagnostic examination of patients.

The books required or recommended for courses of instruction are announced at the beginning of each academic year.

Housing

Bard Hall, at 50 Haven Avenue overlooking Riverside Park and the Hudson River, is the residence for students in the College. Its facilities include lounges, a cafeteria and several dining rooms, and a gymnasium with a swimming pool, basketball and squash courts, and facilities for other sports.

Room rates at Bard Hall depend on the length of the academic year and the room assignment. Information on the cafeteria service, room application forms, and other details are provided for entering students by the Admissions Office. For further information, write to the Bard Hall Manager, 50 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Apartments are available for married students in Bard Haven Tower I on the Medical Center campus. Married or single students may rent apartments in Towers 11 and III; the rents are higher. Information may be obtained from the Manager, Bard Haven Towers, 100 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Financial Aid

All financial aid awards are based on verified need. Each year applicants for financial aid are required to borrow a sum of money (unit loan) before becoming eligible for scholarships administered by the College. Financial aid awards are intended to supplement, rather than substitute for, the student's resources and parental contribu- tions.

FINANCIAL AID 31

Upon acceptance to the College, students receive the financial aid policy statement, loan interest and repayment information, and an application form which must be completed promptly. Students enrolled in the College are informed annually about the policies for the coming academic year and the dates for submission of the financial aid application and loan applications. Further information may be obtained from the Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, telephone (212) 694-4100.

Spouses of medical students should consult the personnel offices of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and of the Presbyterian Hospital for information regarding employment opportunities at the Medical Center.

Scholarships

Students are urged to determine the availability of scholarship assistance from the states in which they reside and to make application for such funds when appropriate. As an example. New York State provides funds through the Tuition Assistance Program to residents who meet financial qualifications. In addition, New York State has instituted the Special Regents Medical Scholarship, which is intended to ease the physician shortage in certain areas of the state. The Financial Aid Office provides interested students with the necessary information on applications for these programs. Applicants to medical school should consult college premedical offices for information on the competitive New York State Regents Awards.

Among nongovernmental sources of funding there is the National Medical Fellow- ships, Inc., which awards fellowships to needy black Americans, American Indians, Mexican-Americans, and mainland Puerto Ricans. Applicants must be citizens of the United States or permanent residents (visa status). Awards are given to first- and second-year medical students. Enrolled medical students should apply to NMF at 250 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 before March 1 for financial assistance for the second year of medical school. Applicants to medical school should request information from NMF.

The R.G. Haddad Foundation Scholarship is available for enrolled medical students who are United States citizens of Syrian or Lebanese descent. Applicants must have verified financial need. A grant for one year may be renewed upon application. Annually, the Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons advises students of the availability of this scholarship.

There are a number of scholarship funds administered by the Financial Aid Office of the College. With the exception of the Lawrence John Durante Scholarship (see below), students do not apply directly for these scholarships. The named scholarships listed below have been donated by alumni, foundations, corporations, and friends of the University.

Endowed Scholarship Funds

ALLEN Gift of Mrs. Vivian B. Allen.

ALUMNI A limited number of national scholarships. Provided by gifts from the P&S Alumni Association and other contributors.

ANONYMOUS Several; awarded annually.

BANBURY From the Banbury Scholarship Fund.

ALICE IDA AND ABRAHAM PENNER BERNHEIM SCHOLARSHIP FUND For tuition.

ISAAC J. AND RENA HENLY BERNHEIM Given by the family in honor of Isaac J. and Rena Henly Bernheim.

32 FINANCIAL AID

ELSIE J. BIRTWHISTLE Founded by the will of Morell Birtwhistle, in memory of his wife.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, Jr. From the George Blumenthal, Jr., Fund.

ELIZABETH ROCK BRACKETT SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Dr. Brackett, the income to be used for scholarship assistance for women medical students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

Dr. HARRY BRITENSTOOL MEMORIAL From the estate of Mrs. Blanche B. Ostheimer, in memory of her brother.

LUCIEN AND ETHEL BROWNSTONE MERIT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND A merit scholarship awarded every four years.

Dr. MOSES R. BUCHMAN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students, with preference given to those who are residents of Westchester and who plan to practice pediatrics. Established by friends of Dr. Buchman.

DAVID C. BULL MEMORIAL In memory of Dr. David C. Bull, a former member of the Department of Surgery.

RICHARD BUTLER Open to men born in the state of Ohio who are qualified for admission to, and plan to enter, Columbia College, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, or the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ALONZO CLARK Founded by the will of Alonzo Clark, M.D., LL.D., for many years president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1890 Given by a member of the class.

CLASS OF 1899 Given by the class in commemoration of the thirty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1912 Given by the class on the fifteenth anniversary of its gradua- tion.

CLASS OF 1913 For medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1920 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1924 To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of their graduation.

CLASS OF 1928 Given at their tenth reunion.

CLASS OF 1932 For a scholarship room. Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1933 For a scholarship.

CLASS OF 1934 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1936 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1937 Awarded for tuition of medical students.

CLASS OF 1938 Awarded annually to assist a student in the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1939 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

FINANCIAL AID 33

CLASS OF 1940 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1942 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1952 Given by members of the class on the tenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1953 Given by members of the class.

CLASS OF 1964 Established in memory of Dr. Howard Gerstel.

HENRY D. CRUGER Bequest of Helen Cruger, in memory of the Henry D. Cruger family.

CHARLES A. DANA FOUNDATION, Inc. Established by the Foundation.

ANTHONY M. DeANGELIS Open to a student of the fourth-year class. Given by Dr. Anthony M. DeAngelis.

HORACE DENNETT Open to students in the third- and fourth-year classes.

DAVID M. DEVENDORF Preference is given to a candidate from Herkimer County, New York, preferably one from the town of Herkimer. Given by Mrs. David M. Devendorf of Herkimer, New York, in memory of her husband. Dr. David M. Devendorf, Class of 1861.

FRANCIS E. DOUGHTY Given by Miss Phoebe Caroline Swords, in memory of Dr. Francis E. Doughty, Class of 1869.

LAWRENCE JOHN DURANTE Given by members of the Class of 1961, in memory of Lawrence John Durante. Awarded annually to a senior student with verified financial need by the Durante Scholarship Fund Committee after review of the applications of qualified students.

EDWARD PERCY EGLEE Bequest of Edward Percy Eglee, Class of 1913, member of the Faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons from 1919 until his retirement in 1953, when he was a clinical professor of medicine.

JOSEPH HERMAN AND HANNAH EICHNER Established by the will of Benjamin Bernard Eichner, Class of 1919.

JOSEPH C. FOSTER Given by Mrs. Esther J. Foster, in memory of her husband.

VIRGINIA KNEELAND FRANTZ Bequest of Dr. Frantz.

NELLIE ALDEN FRANZ Bequest of Nellie A. Franz to Columbia University for scholarships to worthy young women for undergraduate or graduate study, with preference for those interested in medicine, nursing, sociology, and journalism.

GEORGE AND CHARLIE Given by the Alumni Association of the College, in memory of George Peters and Charles Costello, long-time employees of the Medical Center.

JACOB HARSEN Given by Dr. Jacob Harsen.

FRANK HARTLEY Given by friends and colleagues of Dr. Frank Hartley, class of 1880.

WILLIAM H. HEMINGWAY

AARON HIMMELSTEIN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students. Given by Dr. Himmelstein's friends and colleagues.

34 FINANCIAL AID

IRMA T. HIRSCHL SCHOLARSHIPS From the estate of Irma T. Hirschl. Awarded on the criteria of financial need, outstanding scholarship and dedication to medical science, the easing of pain and protection of life.

CHARLES EUGENE HUBER, Sr. Bequest of Francis D. Huber, in memory of his father.

FRANCIS HUBER Open to a graduate of any institution other than Columbia University, City College, Barnard College, or Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

VIOLA B. HUBER Open to a graduate of Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ABRAHAM JACOBI For graduates of Columbia University and City College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber, in memory of Dr. Abraham Jacobi.

EDWARD R. JEAL Awarded to deserving students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

CHARLES CHRISTIAN LIEB Awarded to a student interested in the study of pharmacology. Given in memory of Dr. Charles Christian Lieb, Hosack Professor of Pharmacology.

LI MING Awarded with preference to students of Chinese birth or descent or nationality. Established by bequest of Mr. Li Ming.

MARJORIE McANENY Open to a graduate of Barnard College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ELIZABETH HALL McCULLOGH Given by Mrs. William G. Heaphy in memory of her sister. Dr. Elizabeth McCullogh, an alumna of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

HERBERT D. MANLEY Given as bequest by the late Dr. Herbert D. Manley.

FRANCIS HARTMAN MARKOE Given by Madeline Shelton Markoe, in memory of her husband.

M. MONTGOMERY MAZE From the estate of M. Montgomery Maze, Pearl River, N.Y. Part of this fund may be used for scholarships and/or fellowships, preferably for graduates of the Pearl River High School.

MABEL C. MEAD Awarded to women students of Chinese ancestry. Preference given to those desiring to study medicine.

VIVIAN AND SEYMOUR MILSTEIN ENDOWMENT FOR SCHOLARSHIPS Estab- lished by the donors in honor of their friends and physicians, Drs. David Habif and Duane Todd.

SAMUEL J. MORITZ MEMORIAL Given by the executors of the estate of Samuel J. Moritz.

GULLI LINDH MULLER Bequest of the donor to be awarded with preference to a gifted woman student.

P&S SCHOLARSHIP AID AND LOAN FUND Established by the wives of the members of the Faculty of Medicine, faculty, and friends of the College.

RUDOLPH AND MARY E. PFEIFFER Given by Mrs. Mary E. Pfeiffer.

FINANCIAL AID 35

PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIP Granted with preference to sons or daughters of alumni of Presbyterian Hospital. Given by the Society of the Alumni of Presbyterian Hospital.

WILLIAM COLE R APPLE YE Established at the retirement of Dean Rappleye.

RICHARD RHODEBECK Given by Mrs. Richard Rhodebeck, in memory of her husband.

DAVID H. ROUS From family, friends, and business associates of David H. Rous, the income to be divided equally among the Graduate School of Business, Columbia College, and the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

LOUIS AND RACHAEL RUDIN Established by the Rudin Foundation for students of excellence who would not otherwise be able to complete their education.

SAGAMORE Awarded to needy students.

JOSEPH F. SAPHIR MEMORIAL Given by Elsa M. Saphir, in memory of her husband, Joseph F. Saphir, Class of 1902.

THE MARY S. SAXE SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Mary S. Saxe.

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Given by faculty members, alumni, and students, in honor of Dr. Severinghaus's services to the College.

BERNARD E. SMITH MEMORIAL Given by Mrs. Gertrude Smith, in memory of her husband.

THE JAMES A. STEVENSON MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by Mrs. Ann Stevenson Hardesty, in memory of her brother James Albert Stevenson, Class of 1943.

EDGAR EGINTON STEWART, Jr., MEMORIAL Given by Dr. E. E. Stewart, in memory of his son.

ARTHUR PURDY STOUT MEMORIAL Given by the Arthur Purdy Stout So- ciety.

ARNOLD STURMDORF Awarded to one or more students in their third or fourth year of medical school. Bequest of Miriam Sturmdorf.

HAROLD S. VAUGHAN Bequest of Dr. Harold Vaughan, Class of 1904.

ANDREA VICALE MEMORIAL Established by Dr. Carmine T. Vicale, in memory of his father.

HERMANN VOLLMER Established in his memory by his wife.

THEODORE L. VOSSELER Preference is given to graduates of Colgate University. Given by Dr. Allison J. Vosseler, Class of 1933, in memory of his father, Dr. Theodore L. Vosseler.

ROBERT M. WECHSLER Given by Dr. I. S. Wechsler, in memory of his son, Robert M. Wechsler, Class of 1945, and by members of the class of 1945, in memory of their classmate.

WHITING— Dr. FORDYCE B. St. JOHN SCHOLARSHIP FUND Gift by the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation, in honor of Dr. Fordyce B. St. John.

Dr. JAMES LANCELOT WILSON Awarded to a student selected by the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

36 FINANCIAL AID

CLARA AND KRIKOR ZOHRAB Awarded with preference to students of Armenian extraction. Students are eligible to apply through interschool fellowship competition upon recommendation of the financial aid officer.

Gift Funds

CITIBANK MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by the Citibank. Th^ .-ecipient must have demonstrated need for support and he/she must be a New York State resident.

VALERIE AND GEORGE DELACORTE FOUNDATION Annual gift.

GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP GIFT FUND Gifts and memorials by various donors.

CHARLES F. IKLE SCHOLARSHIP AND RESEARCH FUND Grant by the New York Community Trust.

JAMES T. LEE FOUNDATION, Inc. Annual grant to medical students.

JULIUS E. STOLFI MEDICAL EDUCATION AND RESEARCH FUND SCHOLAR- SHIP

THE SULZBERGER FOUNDATION Annual gift. Awarded to senior students with very good academic records, significant financial need, and plans to pursue careers in family medicine or general internal medicine in nonurban areas.

Loans

Loans are available to all full-time medical students. These funds are provided by various sources, including the federal and state governments, the University, and also private agencies, as outlined below.

Foreign students who hold an F-1 student visa are eligible to borrow only from University funds and must have comakers who are citizens or permanent residents of the United States. Comakers should not be University employees or members of the applicant's immediate family (i.e., mother, father, spouse). Foreign students may borrow from federal or state loan funds upon being granted permanent resident visa status in the United States.

Federal Health Professions Loans. These are allocated by the Bureau of Health Manpower of the National Institutes of Health to individual medical schools, which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be loaned. Assuming the availability of adequate funding, the maximum loan to a student in an academic year is the cost of tuition plus $2,500. Loans are repayable to the school over a ten-year period beginning one year after completing or interrupting the prescribed full-time course of study. Interest at the annual rate of 7 percent begins to accrue when the loan becomes repayable.

Repayment of Health Professions Loans may be deferred up to three years for those who become members of a uniformed federal service on sustained full-time duty (i.e., the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Coast and Geodetic Survey), the Public Health Service, or the Peace Corps. For those pursuing advanced professional training, repayment may be deferred to completion of the training program. Interest does not accrue during period of deferment.

Health Professions Loans are forgiven or canceled under certain conditions: (1) In the instance of students who agree to practice medicine for at least two years in a region of a state that has been determined to need additional personnel, the federal government will repay 60 percent of the outstanding principal and interest on any educational loan(s)

FINANCIAL AID 37

for the cost of professional education. For a third year of practice in such an area, an additional 25 percent of the loan(s) will be repaid. (2) The outstanding loans of students who fail to complete their health professions studies will be repaid if they are in exceptionally needy circumstances, from a low-income or disadvantaged family, and cannot be expected to resume studies within two years. (3) Loans of students who die or suffer permanent and total disability will be canceled.

National Direct Student Loans. Funds are allocated by the Office of Education to schools which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be awarded. The total (undergraduate and graduate school loans) available to a student from the NDSL program is $10,000. The current interest rate, payable during the repayment period, is 3 percent on the unpaid principal. Repayment begins nine months after graduation or after leaving school. The repayment period may extend up to ten years. Repayment may be deferred for up to three years during active U.S. military service or during service in the Peace Corps or Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA).

Federal and State Guaranteed Loans. Under the auspices of the Office of Education of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, federally insured loans are made by authorized banks, savings-and-loan associations, credit unions, pension funds, and insurance companies. The maximum loan each academic year under this program is $5,000, and the total outstanding loan balance at any one time may not exceed $15,000. Interest may not be in excess of an annual percentage rate of 7 percent. Lending institutions participating in this program can provide further information regarding interest rates. Repayment begins nine to twelve months after the student's studies have been completed or otherwise terminated and is usually scheduled for completion within five to ten years.

Deferment of repayment is permitted to up to three years during the student's service in the military, the Peace Corps, or VISTA.

Other Sources of Loans. The National Education Loan Guarantee Program of the American Medical Association Education and Research Foundation (AMA-ERF) makes possible loans to all medical students, interns, and residents in good standing who are United States citizens, provided they are enrolled in full-time training at an AMA- approved American medical school or hospital and can demonstrate financial need. Medical students must have completed their first semester in order to qualify. The maximum amount that can be borrowed in a twelve-month period (September 1 to August 31) is $2,500. Up to a total of $12,500 may be borrowed over a period of seven years. The minimum loan for any one interim note is $400.

Interest rates have not been set at the time of this printing. Interest charges must be paid in full each year by the student. Payment of principal is deferred during the training period. Prepayment of principal may be made at any time without penalty.

University loan funds are also intended to supplement students' resources. Repayment of these loans is scheduled to begin nine months after graduation and to be completed within ten years (provided that a repayment rate of at least $30 a month is maintained). The interest charge for University loans is 3 percent a year on the outstanding loan balance.

The University has certain named loan funds from which medical students may borrow when monies are available. Included among these are the following funds:

PETER AMAZON Bequest of Peter Amazon.

LEONARD ALEXANDER ARMS Bequest of Lydia B. Arms, in memory of her husband, to create a revolving loan fund for scholarship and research to medical students and graduate students at P&S.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, Jr. Used for the assistance of needy students in the medical school.

38 FINANCIAL AID

CLASS OF 1906 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1906.

CLASS OF 1919 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1919. To be used for loans to deserving students.

CAROL ELISSA GARDNER Established by Dr. M. Jordan Thorstad, in memory of his wife. Dr. Carol Elissa Gardner Thorstad, Class of 1941.

DAVID GREENE A bequest from the estate of Fannye Greene Meyerson, in honor of her brother. Dr. David Greene. Used for assistance of needy students in the medical school and Columbia College.

GEORGE L. HAWKINS, Jr. Gift of George L. Hawkins, Jr., Class of 1941.

B. H. HOMAN, Jr. REVOLVING LOAN FUND Long-term, low-interest loans for needy students.

ROBERT ABBE MACKENZIE Established by friends, colleagues, and patients of Dr. MacKenzie, an alumnus of the Class of 1921.

GEORGE W. MERCK MEMORIAL Established by the Merck Company Foundation in honor of George W. Merck. For graduates of P&S, wherever they are in training, or to graduates of other medical schools in training at hospitals affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

JESSIE SMITH NOYES

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Established by the Clark Foundation as an unrestricted, discretionary fund to be used primarily for the support of students and student activities. Priority given to fourth-year students who are subjected to increased living and transportation costs because of electing clerkships at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, N.Y.

WALTER C. AND MARJORIE C. STEIN Bequest of Marjorie C. Stein.

STEINHARDT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Bequest of Samuel C. Steinhardt. Awarded to graduates of one of the colleges of the City University of New York who have attended public schools exclusively (except for religious instruction). To be repaid in fifteen years; without interest for the first ten years; with 5 percent annual interest thereafter on the unpaid balance.

In addition to the foregoing, periodically there are funds for short-term emergency loans, which are administered through the Financial Aid Office of the medical school.

Prizes

Dr. HARRY S. ALTMAN PRIZE Awarded to an outstanding senior student who demonstrates a special interest in pediatric ambulatory care. Established to honor Dr. Harry S. Altrnan, in recognition of his outstanding contributions to scholarship in pediatrics.

HERBERT J. BARTELSTONE AWARD IN PHARMACOLOGY Awarded to a member of the graduating class of the College who has demonstrated exceptional accomplishments in pharmacology. Established to honor the memory of Professor Herbert J. Bartelstone, member of the Department of Pharmacology from 1950 until 1973, dedicated and inspiring teacher, and uncompromising advocate of the importance of rigorous preparation in basic medical science in the education of the physician.

COAKLEY MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Otolaryngology to a senior student who has done outstanding work in the field.

TITUS MUNSON COAN PRIZE Awarded to the senior student who has submitted the best essay in biological science or otherwise best contributed to its advancement. Bequest of Titus M. Coan.

FINANCIAL AID 39

THOMAS F. COCK, M.D., PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for excellence in obstetrics and gynecology.

FREDERICK PARKER GAY MEMORIAL AWARD Awarded to the senior student whose work in microbiology is judged the most outstanding. Given by Mrs. Frederick Parker Gay, in memory of her husband.

JANEWAY PRIZE Awarded to the student graduating from the College with the highest marks for efficiency and ability. Given by the bequest of Matilda S. J. Wisner.

Dr. HAROLD LAMPORT BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for the best thesis reporting original biomedical research. Gift of the Lamport Foundation.

ROBERT F. LOEB AWARD Awarded to a senior student who, in the opinion of the Department of Medicine, has shown the greatest promise of excellence in clinical medicine. Established in memory of Dr. Robert F. Loeb, Bard Professor of Medicine, and chairman of the Department of Medicine from 1947 to 1959.

F. PHILIP LOWENFISH PRIZE IN DERMATOLOGY Awarded to the individual who has done the most creative and original research in dermatology. Given by Mrs. Lowenfish, in her husband's memory.

EDITH AND DENTON McKANE MEMORIAL AWARD Bequest of Edith U. McKane. Awarded to a senior student for excellence in basic or clinical research in ophthalmology.

Dr. HAROLD LEE MEIERHOF MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded on recommendation of the professor of pathology to the student who has done the best work in the field during the four years of medical school. Given by the parents of Dr. Harold Lee Meierhof, Class of 1917.

NEW YORK ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL AWARD An annual prize awarded to a senior student upon nomination by the Department of Orthopedic Surgery, for outstanding performance in the field.

JOSEPH GARRISON PARKER AWARD Awarded to the senior in the College who best exemplifies, through a continued personal interest and activities in art, music, literature, or the public interest, the fact that Living and Learning go on together. Given by Dr. and Mrs. Philip Parker, in memory of their son, Joseph, Class of 1948, whose promising career in medicine was cut short by death in 1953, but in whose life the love of music and the arts was a constant source of inspiration.

P&S CLASS OF 1924, Dr. ALLEN O. WHIPPLE MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded to a senior student, upon nomination of the Department of Surgery, for outstanding performance in the field.

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Psychiatry to a second-year student for the best work in psychopathology.

SAMUEL W. ROVER AND LEWIS ROVER AWARD An annual prize to be awarded to a graduating medical student or a male graduate student for scholarship and outstanding achievement in biochemistry at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ANN RYAN PRIZE IN BIOCHEMISTRY To be awarded to deserving women graduate students.

HELEN M. SCIARRA PRIZE Awarded to a senior student in the College for outstanding work in neurology.

40 FINANCIAL AID STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES

Dr. ALFRED STEINER AWARD Presented annually to one or more students chosen by a faculty committee on the basis of achievement in medical research. Funded by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in honor of Dr. Steiner.

Dr. HAROLD B. STEVELMAN AWARD Awarded to a senior student for excellence in adult cardiology. In honor of Dr. Harold Stevelman, Class of 1958, in appreciation of his service to the family of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert.

UROLOGY PRIZES Awarded to senior students for the best essays on urological subjects.

Dr. WILLIAM PERRY WATSON PRIZE IN PEDIATRICS Awarded on the nomina- tion of the professor of pediatrics to that member of the graduating class of the College who has shown the most notable work in the study of the diseases of infants and children.

Dr. WILLIAM RAYNER WATSON AWARD Awarded to that member of the graduating class who has done the most outstanding work in psychiatry during the four years of attendance at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

SIGMUND L. WILENS PRIZE Awarded to a member of the graduating class who, in the opinion of the Department of Pathology, has been distinguished by special excellence in pathology. Gift of Dr. Marie Renate Dische Wilens, in memory of her husband. Dr. Sigmund L. Wilens.

Student and Alumni Activities

All students enrolled in the College enjoy the privileges and facilities of the University campus, including the University libraries.

P&S Club

The P&S Club was founded over eighty years ago by John R. Mott, who later won the Nobel Peace Prize. The Club is the most active and comprehensive student organization in American medical education today. All matriculated students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are members, eligible to participate in extracurricular activities of their choice. Under the guidance of the Faculty Advisory Board, the student cabinet, led by the president, assumes the entire responsibility for management of the Club. The cabinet consists of four elected members from each class and those who chair the following committees: Orientation, Handbook, Student-Faculty Home Visits, Films, Concerts, Choral Society, Bard Hall Players, Fine Arts, Athletics, Community Youth Work, Accessories, Social, and Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Society.

Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society

A chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha, the national honor medical society, was founded at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1907. Students are elected to membership in the senior year by a committee of the faculty appointed by the Dean. The committee is chaired by the Alpha Omega Alpha Councilor of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Student membership is determined according to the constitution of the national society. Election is limited to those whose scholastic qualifications place them in the upper 25 percent of the class. The number of student members elected from any class may not exceed one-sixth of the number expected to graduate in that class. Although scholastic excellence is required for membership, integrity, capacity for

STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES 41

leadership, compassion, and fairness in dealing with one's colleagues are judged to be of equal significance.

P&S Development and Alumni Relations Office

The P&S Development and Alumni Relations Office considers its prime mission to be the fostering and maintenance of cordial relationships between the College of Physicians and Surgeons and its alumni. As such, the office is responsible for the administration of both alumni relations programming and alumni annual fund-raising projects throughout the course of any year.

Historically, alumni served by the office have included all those awarded the M.D. or Med. Sc.D. degrees from the College as well as those awarded the Certificate in Psychoanalytic Medicine. As of May 6, 1978, however, the Alumni Association, by amendment to its Constitution, also conferred automatic associate member status upon all faculty of the College; all interns, residents, and visiting fellows with appointments of one year or more at hospitals affiliated with P&S; and all Ph.D. graduates of the Basic Sciences Curricula including Anatomy, Biochemistry, Human Genetics, Microbiology, Pathology, Pharmacology, and Physiology.

The work of the Alumni Association is accomplished through the efforts of the officers and the sixteen standing and ad hoc committees, all of whom form the constituency of the P&S Alumni Council; all alumni, of whatever membership status, are encouraged to volunteer for and participate in the work and activities sponsored by these groups.

Restricted revenues raised by the Alumni Association provide funds for a number of fully endowed scholarships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Currently, the Alumni Association is also embarked on a long-term project to fund and endow a P&S Alumni Association professorship. Unrestricted revenues raised by the Alumni Asso- ciation allow the College flexibility in applying funds to areas of greatest need. For example, during the 1977-1978 fiscal year, unrestricted revenues financed a capital expenditure for the Audio/Visual Department, thereby allowing that administrative unit to purchase equipment utilized in support of the College's Continuing Education Program. Routinely, a substantial stipend from unrestricted revenues also goes to the P&S Club, underwriting virtually all of the Club's yearly operating needs.

Among the important functions performed through the P&S Development and Alumni Relations Office is the quarterly publication of the P&S Journal. This magazine, cosponsored by the alumni and the medical school, endeavors to speak to the College of Physicians and Surgeons community-at-large. All alumni, faculty, and those involved in postgraduate training at affiliated hospitals receive the P&S Journal gratis. It is also free to current students and their parents and to a wide range of other friends and associates of the College.

As future alumni, students play an important role in the work and deliberations of the Alumni Association. As full and equal members of the Student Alumni Relations Committee, students and alumni work together in addressing students' current needs and seeking solutions to their problems.

Information about the Alumni Association and its activities is available from the P&S Development and Alumni Relations Office, 2005-C, Black Building, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032. Telephone: (212) 694-3498.

The Program of Instruction

The first year curriculum is largely devoted to basic science courses with correlation clinics to demonstrate the application of scientific information to the practice of medicine. The first-year student also studies the impact of health care systems in our current society on the individual patient and physician. Second-year courses concentrate on the clinical relevance of basic science concepts as the bridging process to clinical instruction begins. Correlations between pathology and pathophysiology are empha- sized. The development of basic clinical skills begins in the second semester and culminates in a four-week clerkship. Throughout both preclinical years elective opportunities are available for pursuit of areas of interest.

The major clinical year is devoted exclusively to rotations on clerkships in the clinical disciplines. Under close supervision the students are helped to develop the skills and knowledge required for the practice of clinical medicine. Students learn to elicit a comprehensive history and to carry out a complete physical examination. They learn to develop professional relationships with patients, and they acquire an understanding of the mechanisms of disease and of the principles necessary for valid diagnostic appraisal and effective therapeutic plans.

All courses of the first three years of the curriculum are required of all students. In the fourth year, with the guidance of faculty advisers, students design individual elective curricula, drawn from a wide range of basic scientific electives, clinical electives, and research programs offered by the faculty. The elective courses of all departments are described in a catalog which is printed annually and distributed to students and faculty. Students are permitted to spend three months of the curriculum in elective programs offered by other medical schools. In addition, the School of Public Health offers international medicine programs that provide opportunities to study the organization and delivery of health services in many countries of the world.

During the elective curriculum students have available the resources of the entire University. Students are encouraged to utilize elective curriculum time to reach career decisions. Faculty advisers stress the acquisition of knowledge and skills in areas of medicine apart from the student's career discipline, and they encourage students to gain experience in clinical and/or laboratory research.

The College reserves the right to make changes in the program of studies and courses of instruction at any time.

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence

All courses are rated on an Honors-Pass-Fail system and these ratings only are recorded on the official transcripts. Students are not ranked within the class. Faculty provide narrative descriptions of student performances in preclinical courses (Abnormal Human Biology, Introduction to the Patient, and Psychiatric Medicine I and II), major clinical year clerkships, and elective programs. These evaluations become part of the student's permanent academic record in the Office of the Dean.

There are three standing faculty committees concerned with students' academic performances. These committees are: the First Year Class Faculty, the Second Year Class Faculty, and the Clinical Committee. The latter deals with academic performances in the major clinical year and the elective curriculum. The standing committees meet during each academic year to review student performances and to make decisions related to course failures and to promotions. Course failures in all years of the curriculum must be corrected according to the directives of the faculty committees. A student may be advanced to the next academic year of the medical school curriculum only upon recommendation of the faculty committee. In any year of the curriculum students may be dismissed for poor scholarship. Repetition of a year of the curriculum

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 43

may be recommended by a faculty committee. The faculty committees may direct students whose performances are marginal to undertake additional work to correct deficiencies and strengthen overall performance in any discipline.

Students are informed in writing of the academic decisions of all faculty committees. Students have the right to appeal decisions of the faculty committees. A student who wishes to appeal may request the concerned committee to reverse or alter a decision. If the committee reaffirms the original decision, the student may direct an appeal to the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, who may refer the appeal to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Council for final decision.

The Faculty of Medicine reserves the right to dismiss, or to deny admission, registration, readmission, or graduation to any student who in the judgment of the Faculty of Medicine is determined to be unsuited for the study or practice of medicine.

Students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are required to pass National Board examinations Parts I and II prior to graduation.

Leaves of absence may be granted by the Dean for a limited period of time in exceptional circumstances only for health reasons or personal emergencies.

Key to Course Numbers

Medical Center courses: The suffixes F and S refer to first- and second-year courses, respectively. Numbers without a suffix indicate major clinical year clerkships that are repeated throughout the year in instruction periods of twelve weeks or less.

Summary of Curriculum (for students entering in September 1979)

First Year

SEPTEMBER 4, 1979 to JANUARY 11, 1980. First semester. JANUARY 14, 1980 to JUNE 6, 1980. Second semester.

Second Year

SEPTEMBER 2, 1980 through JUNE 30, 1981.

Third and Fourth Years

JULY 1, 1981 through APRIL 30, 1983.

Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses of the First and Second Years

Abnormal Human Biology lOlS.

Dr. Canfield and interdepartmental associates: Cardiology, Dr. Drusin; Pulmonary. Dr. Harvey; Endocrinology-Metabolism, Dr. Holub; Gastroen- terology. Dr. Glickman; Hematology. Dr. Rifkind; Immunology, Dr. Butler; Infectious Diseases. Dr. Neu; Oncology, Dr. Weinstein; Nephrology, Dr. Al-Awqati; Surgery. Dr. Lo-Gerfo.

Exercises in the application and correlation of the basic sciences to a broad range of clinical problems. Teaching is by seminar/lecture and is closely integrated with courses in pathology, pharmacology, and introductory medicine.

44 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Anatomy lOlF. Microscopic anatomy Dr. Nunez and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies of structure in relation to function.

Anatomy 102F. Human anatomy Dr. Moss and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory encompassing basic morphological and functional human anatomy.

Anatomy 103F. Developmental anatomy Dr. Pfenninger and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and laboratory emphasizing the fundamental processes of embryogenesis; closely integrated with Anatomy lOlF-Microscopic anatomy.

Biochemistry lOlF. Introductory biochemistry Dr. Gold and departmental staff.

Lectures and conferences stressing principles of biochemistry and their relationship to disease processes.

Genetics lOlS. Introductory clinical genetics Dr. Krooth and associates.

Lectures emphasizing general principles of genetics and their clinical application.

Medicine 101 S. Introduction to the practice of medicine Drs. Canfield, Marcus, and associates.

Lectures, conferences, and seminars addressing ethical and personal issues relevant to the practice of medicine.

Medicine 102S. Introduction to the patient Dr. Morris and associates.

A scries of interdepartmental presentations and demonstrations followed by an intensive four-week preceptorship (at Harlem, Overlook, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital) during which the student will learn to take a comprehensive medical history and to perform a complete physical examination.

Microbiology lOlF. General microbiology Dr. Ginsberg and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory covering the basic principles of cell regulation, immunology, virology, and the biology of pathogenic organisms.

Anatomy-Physiology 106S. Neural science

Drs. Kandel, Kelly, Kupfermann, Rowland, Schwartz, and Spencer.

Lectures, seminars, laboratories, and clinical demonstrations to provide an integrated understanding of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, biochemistry, and behavior.

Nutrition lOlF. Introduction to nutrition Dr. Winick and associates.

Lectures that define the elements of nutrition essential for good health.

Pathology lOlF. General pathology Dr. Branwood and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory emphasizing the mechanisms of injury and repair in cells, tissues, and organ systems.

Pathology 102S. Systemic pathology Dr. Branwood and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies to elucidate the pathogenesis of findings in disease.

Pathology 103S. Neuropathology Dr. Duffy and associates.

Lectures, demonstrations, and microscopic studies of diseases of the nervous system.

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 45

Pharmacology lOlS. General and special pharmacology Dr. Kahn and departmental staff.

Lectures, seminars, and demonstrations to elucidate the basic principles essential for the effective use of drugs as therapeutic or diagnostic agents.

Medicine 105F. Physician-patient relationship Drs. Hembree, Rosenberg, and associates.

Preceptor sessions emphasizing the central role of the physician-patient relationship in the practice of medicine and the importance of the effects of health care organization and other factors on that relationship.

Physiology lOlF. Human physiology Dr. Nocenti and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and conferences to define the function of specific cells, tissues, and organs and their homeostatic mechanisms.

Psychiatry lOlF. Psychiatric Medicine, I Dr. Maxmen and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars presenting the salient features of normal development.

Psychiatry 102S. Psychiatric Medicine, II Dr. Maxmen and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars covering the major mental illnesses and the elements of patient interviewing.

Public Health lOlF. Structure of health care systems Dr. Rosenberg and associates.

Lectures and seminar groups on the current organization of health care.

Public Health 102F. Epidemiology Dr. Rush and associates.

Lectures and seminars to present epidemiological principles.

Public Health 103F. Biostatistics Dr. Fleiss and associates.

Lectures on the basic elements of biostatistics applicable to medicine.

Public Health 104F. Parasitic diseases Dr. Despommier and associates.

Lectures and laboratories stressing parasitic diseases likely to be encountered and the techniques necessary for the diagnosis of these diseases.

Major Clinical Year

Anesthesiology 201. Clinical clerkship in anesthesiology Dr. Bendixen and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship that provides training in preanesthetic evaluation, management and postanesthetic care of surgical patients. At the conclusion of the clerkship students should be able to do the following: (1) describe the major factors to be considered in selecting anesthetic drugs and techniques for patients undergoing common surgical procedures; (2) describe indications for positive pressure ventilation of the lungs and how the adequacy of such ventilation can be determined; (3) differentiate between a patent and obstructed airway in a patient and demonstrate on a patient or mannikin his/her ability to obtain a patent airway by positioning; (4) describe the indications for use of an endotracheal tube; (5) describe procedures used for resuscitation of a patient who has had cardiac arrest and demonstrate on a mannikin his/her ability to perform mouth-to-mouth ventilation and closed chest cardiac massage; (6) describe indications for and contraindications to the use of local anesthetics to provide infiltration and nerve block anesthesia; and (7) describe the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of local anesthetic drug toxicity.

Dermatology 201. Dr. Harber and staff.

46 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Medicine 201. Clinical clerkship in medicine

Dr. Morris and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's

Hospitals.

Extended clinical experience under a preceptorship system at Presbyterian Hospital and at another affiliated hospital, Harlem, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital. At the conclusion of the clerkship the student should be capable of taking a precise medical history, performing an accurate physical examination, interpreting basic laboratory data, formulating a cogent problem list, and communi- cating these data in accurate verbal and written form. These skills will be acquired in the patient care setting in order to increase the student's understanding of the physiologic, psychologic, and social aspects of medicine and to prepare the student for the assumption of clinical responsibility under close supervision.

Neurology 201. Clinical clerkship in neurology

Dr. Rowland and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian

Hospital.

A comprehensive experience in clinical neurology provided at the bedside at the Neurological Institute. Under close supervision of a junior and senior resident and an attending physician in neurology, students learn to obtain a systematic neurological history and to perform and interpret the neurological examination. By active participation in the evaluation and care of patients, expertise is obtained in the diagnosis and treatment of common neurological diseases. Students learn how to do a lumbar puncture and they become familiar with electrodiagnostic and neuroradiological tests. Experience is also obtained in neurosurgery and rehabilitation medicine. Management of neurological emergencies is learned during night call with the senior resident. In addition, a comprehensive core knowledge of clinical neurology is ensured by a course syllabus, daily rounds, and preceptor sessions with the attending physician.

Neurology 202. Neurosurgery

Dr. Schlesinger and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian

Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Obstetrics and Gynecology 201. Clinical clerkship in obstetrics and

gynecology

Dr. Vande Wiele and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St.

Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology under close supervision of house staff and attendings. On the gynecological wards and in the clinics the student learns to take a sexual and gynecological history, to examine the breasts, abdomen, and pelvis, to distinguish normal and abnormal findings relative to gynecological disease, and to diagnose and manage benign and malignant gynecologic tumors. The student acquires the skills needed to approach problems of sexuality and an understanding of the impact of changing physiological states in menarchc and menopause. On the obstetrical service the student learns the medical and surgical complications encountered during pregnancy and delivery, and the student learns to diagnose and manage pregnancy. The student participates in the conduct of labor, the delivery, and the care of the newborn.

Orthopedic Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in orthopedic surgery Dr. Garcia and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

On the orthopedic surgery clerkship students learn to perform an orthopedic physical examination and to take an orthopedic history from a patient. The clerkship provides students with insight into the more common musculoskeletal problems (including fractures and trauma) and the basic approaches to management of these problems by an orthopedic surgeon. The student is expected to gain insight into how the discipline of orthopedic surgery works in conjunction with other specialties and how an orthopedic service provides in-patient and out-patient care.

Otolaryngology 201. Clinical clerkship in otolaryngology Dr. Abramson and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship designed to teach the skills of physical examination of the ear, nose, and throat and to provide an understanding of certain diseases where this examination is crucial in diagnosis and management. The clerkship includes selected didactic lectures, followed by a preceptor-type experience in the clinic where students examine and work up a number of patients under the direct supervision of a faculty member.

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 47

Pediatrics 201. Clinical clerkship in pediatrics

Dr. Katz and staff at the Babies Hospital (Presbyterian), Harlem, Roosevelt,

and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A clinical clerkship providing both in-patient and ambulatory care experience. The student is introduced to the study of infants and children: growth and development, diseases, and health care maintenance. The student will develop basic skills in the following areas: taking the pediatric history from the parents and from the older child; performing the physical examination of the pediatric patient, including the young infant; observing, analyzing, and recording the interaction between parent and child; and ordering and interpreting laboratory tests. The student will learn to integrate the data acquired and formulate an appropriate problem list and plan for the patient. The student will also learn to make the basic measurements of physical, neurological and psychosocial growth and development, and to plot and assess the data.

Psychiatry 201. Clinical clerkship in psychiatry

Dr. Sachar and staff at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Harlem,

Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in psychiatry. In active participation in patient care under faculty supervision the student is expected to learn to conduct a psychiatric history and mental status examination and to develop refined interviewing skills, noting verbal and nonverbal behavior. The student learns to make a psychiatric differential diagnosis, to use psychotropic drugs effectively, to evaluate suicide potential, and to develop and enhance therapeutic rapport. The clerkship aims to provide an appreciation of the effects of psychological, social, and biological phenomena on illness-related behaviors.

Radiology 201. Diagnostic radiology (medical) Dr. Seaman and staff.

Radiology 202. Diagnostic radiology (surgical) Dr. Seaman and staff.

Rehabilitation Medicine 201.

Dr. Downey and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian

Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in surgery

Dr. Reemtsma and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A comprehensive clinical clerkship during which the student is expected to demonstrate improvement in ability to perform histories and physical examinations on surgical patients and to formulate rational diagnostic and therapeutic plans. The student is expected to demonstrate increasing skill and competence in performing selected procedures, in assuming supervised responsibility for patient care, in communicating succinctly and with clarity to patients and colleagues, and in building a functional body of critically examined information regarding common surgical entities.

Surgery 202. Lectures and demonstrations in surgical pathology Drs. Fenoglio and Lane and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Surgery 201.

Urology 201. Clinical clerkship in urology Dr. Lattimer and staff.

During the clinical clerkship in urology students will learn to identify common disorders of the genito-urinary tract through precise patient interviews and examinations. Both ambulatory and in-patients will be evaluated. By knowing diagnostic methods unique to urology, students will be able to formulate appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic plans.

Special Programs

M.D.-Ph.D. Program

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences have formed a cooperative program leading to both the M.D. and Ph.D. degrees. This

48 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

program is supervised by the Graduate Biomedical Sciences Advisory Committee and permits medical students who have a serious interest in basic biomedical research to obtain the Ph.D. degree in one of the fourteen participating disciplines in the program. At least two additional years of study beyond the four required for the M.D. degree should be anticipated for completion of this program. The program is supported by traineeships from the National Institutes of Health.

Applicants interested in the M.D. -Ph.D. program should write for further information and application forms to:

Dr. David Schachter

Chairman, Graduate Biomedical Sciences

Advisory Committee Department of Physiology 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

They should, moreover, make separate, concurrent application for admission to the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Joint M.D./M.P.H. Program

This dual degree program is under the joint direction of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the School of Public Health. In addition to preclinical and clinical medical training, students gain substantive knowledge of the health care delivery system and the technological, social, and political forces that contribute to the problems and patterns of illness, medical care, and delivery of services. They also develop concrete skills of research or administration applicable in interdisciplinary health service settings, both clinical and community based.

Before being considered for admission to the joint degree program, the applicant must first be accepted as a degree candidate in the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Formal application to the School of Public Health may then be made at any time before the student enters the fourth year of medical training. The overall length of the joint program, registration, and scheduling patterns will differ for individual students. The total elapsed time could be as short as four years, but might extend beyond the four-year graduation date of the medical school. In general, during the first three years the joint degree student will use vacation and free time in the medical schedule to cross-register for public health courses. In the fourth year the student will register concurrently in the two schools, permitting opportunities to complete core, track, and elective public health courses and also carry the required clinical elective work in the medical curriculum. The M.D. and the M.P.H. degree may be awarded simultaneously at the end of the fourth year or separately when the requirements have been met.

For further information, consult the Dean's Office in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y., 10032, or the Director's Office in the School of Public Health, 600 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Educational programs are offered by the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine to students who have already earned a bachelor's degree. They may apply for admission to a fourteen-month program leading to a professional certificate in physical therapy or to a two-year program leading to the Master of Science degree in occupational therapy. Details are given in the University bulletin. Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy.

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 49

Program of the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

A course of training in the theory and practice of psychoanalytic medicine is offered through the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research of the Department of Psychiatry. The program, a minimum of four years in length, leads to the award of a certificate in Psychoanalysis. For details, see the bulletin of the Center (formerly the Psychoanalytic Clinic).

Programs in Nutrition

The Master of Science program, administered by the Postgraduate Division of the Faculty of Medicine, is a twelve-month program that serves as a foundation for students who plan to continue for the Doctor of Philosophy degree or to attend a professional school in the health sciences. In addition, the master's program is offered to physicians and other health specialists who wish to augment their training with a knowledge of nutrition.

Requirements for admission: a bachelor's degree from an accredited college, with a strong emphasis on the sciences, including two years of chemistry, one year of biology, and a course in elementary biochemistry. The Graduate Record Examination is required.

Under the jurisdiction of the Executive Committee on Graduate Instruction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, students may follow a program of studies leading to the Ph.D. degree. Course work and thesis research in nutritional biochemistry and in clinical and public health nutrition are carried out under the guidance of the Doctoral Program subcommittee on Nutrition.

Requirements for admission: successful completion of the Master of Science degree program as outlined above, or its equivalent, and demonstrated scholarly ability in pursuing advanced studies and research. In addition, students must fulfill the general requirements for the degree which govern all Ph.D. candidates in the University.

A program of postdoctoral training in nutrition is offered for qualified individuals having the degree of Doctor of Medicine or the degree of Doctor of Philosophy who intend to pursue careers in teaching and research in nutrition. The program includes clinics, selected nutrition courses, seminars, and participation in research projects, with a view to qualifying the individual for teaching in medical schools or in nutrition departments of graduate schools. Specific training is given in the areas of nutrition and development, prenatal growth, obesity, endocrinology, and nutrition and metabolism. This program has considerable flexibility and is arranged with the individual to suit his or her particular goals and needs.

Inquiries concerning the above programs may be directed to the Office of the Director, Institute of Human Nutrition, 701 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Clinical Genetics

While patient services in genetics are rendered through the existing clinical departments of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the teaching, research, and clinical services in genetics are coordinated and integrated by the Committee on Clinical Genetic Services, under the chairmanship of Dr. Arthur Bloom, Professor of Pediatrics and of Human Genetics and Development. The membership of this committee includes physicians and scientists from the Department of Human Genetics and Development and from numerous other departments of the College.

The Program in Clinical Genetics, sponsored and directed by the Committee, offers

50 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

clinical fellowships in genetics and training in the genetic aspects of a wide range of medical and surgical specialties. The Program provides postgraduate clinical teaching, elective courses for medical students, and regular conferences on clinical genetics. The clinical and laboratory facilities of the Presbyterian Hospital, Babies Hospital, and other affiliated hospitals are all utilized in the Program, and the research laboratories of the Department of Human Genetics and Development actively participate in it.

Interested applicants should write for further information to the Chairman, Committee on Clinical Genetic Services, Department of Human Genetics and Development, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry

The program of study in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, which leads to the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, is under the jurisdiction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Information about admission and degree requirements and courses of instruction is given in the bulletin of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

University Program of General Education

The Program of General Education offers a series of courses designed to bring together various scholarly and professional disciplines to explore matters of lasting human concern and distinct contemporary importance. The Program includes both experi- mental and time-tested forms of general education. As an outgrowth of Columbia's long experience in this area, the Program is based on the premise that general education can parallel disciplinary training in the graduate as well as undergraduate years. The Program offers intermediate and advanced courses that supplement such general introductions as Contemporary Civilization, Humanities A and B, Oriental Civilizations, and Oriental Humanities.

The Program's courses and seminars are addressed to both the nonspecialist and the specialist who is willing to venture beyond the conventional disciplinary boundaries. Within the normal limits of appropriate class size, and depending upon the level of the course, most courses are open to qualified students from all divisions of the University. Students should check with their department or school if there are questions about receiving credit toward a major or a degree.

A complete listing of courses offered under the Program will be published as a supplement to the University bulletins in the late summer of 1979. It will include courses not otherwise announced in the bulletins. For information, contact the General Education Program, 1513 International Affairs Building, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 10027. Telephone: (212) 280-2208.

During the 1979-1980 academic year, the Health Sciences Division of the University will conduct a General Education Seminar on the interdisciplinary analysis and explication of value issues in health sciences education, research, and service as related to behavior modification, neonatology, reproductive medicine, and other topics. Seminars in each of these topics meet in the autumn and spring terms and are open to students from any division of the University with permission of a faculty participant. For information, call Dr. Arthur Caplan (694-6883) or the General Education Office (280-2208).

Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship

Through the kindness of generous donors, the resources of the Faculty of Medicine include several distinguished lectureships and a visiting professorship:

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 51

The Cartwright Lecture Fund, established under the will of Benjamin Cartwright, made possible biennial lectures under the sponsorship of the P&S Alumni Association during the period 1881-1912. A new series of Cartwright Lectures was inaugurated under the College's auspices in November 1974.

The Alexander Ming Fisher Lectures were established under the terms of the will of Dr. A. M. Fisher's half-brother, E. Douglas Southwick, to make possible lectures on the general theme of Death and Dying.

The Michael Heidelberger Lectures were begun in 1955 to honor the notable contributions of Dr. Heidelberger, now Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry, and to stimulate further scientific progress in immunochemistry and related disciplines.

The David Seegal Lectureship and Visiting Professorship Fund, given by the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society and others, provides for the appointment of a visiting professor who is in residence for five days. During this time he or she delivers the David Seegal Lecture on Chronic Disease.

Prizes and Awards

The Distinguished Service Award of the College of Physicians and Surgeons is given annually at Commencement exercises to a member of the faculty for outstanding contributions to medicine.

The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, the recipient of which traditionally gives a public lecture, was established under the will of the late S. Gross Horwitz in honor of his mother and is given annually in recognition of outstanding basic research in the fields of biology or biochemistry.

The Joseph Mather Smith Prize is awarded to the graduate of the College whose original research in medical subjects is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be the most meritorious.

The Stevens Triennial Prize is awarded to the person, not necessarily a graduate of the College, whose original research on any medical subject is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be most meritorious.

Postgraduate Programs

Opportunities for continuing medical education beyond the M.D. degree are offered at the College of Physicians and Surgeons through three major programs: (1) the training of specialists by means of hospital residencies; (2) special courses in general medicine and in the specialties, for practicing physicians and physicians in training who wish to renew and continue their educational experiences in the various fields of medicine; and (3) the Doctor of Medical Science Program, for physicians with particular interest and competence in research in the basic sciences. Further information about these programs may be obtained from the Office of the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine.

Graduate Training of Specialists

The program offers training opportunities through fellowships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and residencies at affiliated hospitals for holders of the M.D. degree. Proper training for specialization includes four major elements. First, it provides a comprehensive clinical experience as a resident in a hospital that is equipped and staffed to provide graded responsibilities under the supervision of experts in the selected specialty. Second, it disciplines the resident in scientific attitudes toward health and disease and enriches the clinical experience through advanced training in those medical sciences that are largely concerned with the resident's specialty. Third, it enables the resident to see and to begin to understand the effect of illness on the individual patient and the response of that person to the illness and to the physician. The relationships that the resident physician develops with individual patients set the pattern for his or her participation in the delivery of health care after the completion of the residency. Finally, it gives the student the opportunity, either as a resident or as a fellow, to do basic or clinical research. This, in turn, may stimulate the type of creative productivity that may earn the student a recommendation for admission to a program leading to the award of the Doctor of Medical Science degree.

Postgraduate Courses for Practicing Physicians and Specialists

A variety of short courses have been organized at hospitals and clinics affiliated with the University; they are available at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and at the other affiliated hospitals. No University credit or certificates are granted for these courses, but continuing medical education credit is granted through the Physicians Recognition Award of the American Medical Association.

Courses for the general practitioner furnish opportunities to keep abreast of new knowledge and the latest methods of diagnosis, treatment, and prevention; and to learn the indications, limitations, and value of those technical procedures that require the attention of a qualified specialist. The instruction consists largely of first-hand clinical experience, lectures, demonstrations, and discussion.

For those already practicing a specialty, advanced instruction is given in the therapeutic and diagnostic methods of certain limited fields of practice. Enrollment is limited to those who have the preparation necessary to enable them to benefit by the advanced instruction.

POSTGRADUATE PROGRAMS 53

Program for the Doctor of Medical Science Degree

The University confers the Med.Sc.D. degree upon a few physicians who have completed a research project in one of the basic science fields. Only staff members of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center are eligible for this degree. A minimum of one year of full-time work in the basic science field is required. Additional requirements include completion of a significant and original research project, the passing of a comprehensive and an oral examination, and submission of a dissertation.

Departments of Instruction

Listed are only those faculty appointments and promotions approved by May 15, 1979.

The designation "also" is used with the name of an individual holding a joint appointment in two departments. The designation "in" is used when an individual holds an appointment in the department where listed, with assignment to the department named after the "in." In either case, the name appears in both departmental lists.

Anatomy

Professor and Chairman

Michael D. Gershon B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., 1963 Professors

Charles A. Ely. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1946; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1949 Melvin L. Moss. B.A., New York University, 1942; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D.,

1954 Charles R. Noback. B.S., Cornell, 1936; M.S., New York University, 1938; Ph.D.,

Minnesota, 1942 Virginia Tennyson (also Pathology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor,

1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Adjunct Professor

Manfred Otto Nahmmacher. Ph.D., Giessen (Germany), 1960 Associate Professors

Ernest W. April. B.S., Tufts, 1961; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969

Philip W. Brandt. B.A., Swarthmore, 1952; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1957; Ph.D., Colum- bia, 1960

Eladio A. Nunez. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1951; M.S., 1953; Ph.D., New York University, 1964

Karl H. Pfenninger. M.D., Zurich, 1971

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Arline D. Deitch. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1954

Adjunct Associate Professor

Richard M. Hoar. B.A., Dartmouth, 1950; Ph.D., Texas, 1956

Assistant Professors

Richard Ambron. B.S., Villanova, 1965; Ph.D., Temple, 1971

Halina Den (in Neurology). B.S., Frankfurt, 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954;

Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Abraham B. Eastwood (in Neurology). B.S., Muhlenberg, 1965; M.S., Lehigh, 1967;

Ph.D., 1971 Alan R. Gintzler. B.A., Hunter, 1969; Ph.D., New York University, 1974 James P. Kelly. B.A., Harpur, 1966; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1971

ANATOMY . ANESTHESIOLOGY 55

Daniel M. Linkie (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., State University of New York (Downstate), 1962; M.S., State University of New York (Albany), 1963; Ph.D., Michigan, 1971

Marie Maylie-Pfenninger. Baccalaureate, Algiers, 1960; L. es Sc, Marseilles, 1963; Docteur de Specialite, 1967; Ph.D., 1972

Ann-Judith Silverman. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1967; Ph.D., 1970

Elizabeth Thompson. B.A., Radcliffe, 1964; Ph.D., Cornell, 1971

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES INSTRUCTOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Julia R. Currie, Ph.D. Sharon C. Colacino, Ph.D. Gladys Pinczuk, Ph.D.

Cheryl Dreyfus, Ph.D. Diana L. Sherman, B.S.

Taube Pearl Rothman, Ph.D.

Anesthesiology

Professor and Chairman

Henrik H. Bendixen. M.D., Copenhagen, 1951

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland),

1941; M.D., Geneva, 1957 Lester C. Mark. M.D., Toronto, 1941

Gabriel G. Nahas. M.D., Toulouse, 1944; Ph.D., Minnesota, 1953 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Pharmacology). M.B., National Central (Nanking), 1944

Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Leonard Brand. B.S., Yale, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Edgar C. Hanks. B.A., Gettsyburg, 1943; M.D., Jefferson, 1947

Jacob S. Israel. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949

Ernest Salanitre. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1936; M.D., Rome, 1942

Adjunct Professor

Sidney Spector (also Pharmacology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jeffer- son, 1956

Associate Professors

Ralph A. Epstein. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1963

Allen I. Hyman (also Pediatrics). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical

College, 1959 Hisayo O. Morishima. M.D., Toho (Tokyo), 1951; Ph.D., Tokyo, 1959 Eugene J. Pantuck. B.S., Tufts, 1959; M.D., 1963 Lubos Triner. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1955; Ph.D., 1961

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Richard S. Matteo. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1955

56 ANESTHESIOLOGY

Assistant Professors

Keith J. Bernstein B.A., New York University, 1968; M.D., State University of New

York, (Downstate), 1974 Richard Z.Y. Chen. M.D., National Taiwan, 1966 Foun-Chung Fan. M.D., Taipei Medical College (Taiwan), 1972 Arthur Donald Finck. B.S., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Yakub A. Gangat. B.S., Bombay, 1961; M.D., Gujarat, 1967 John A. Holzer. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1968; M.D., 1972 Hoshang Jal Khambatta. M.D., Karachi, 1958 Vance Lauderdale. B.A., Harvard, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1947 Norman M. Mazza. B.E.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1964; M.D., New York

Medical College, 1972 Leila M. Pang (also Pediatrics). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1964 Hilda Pedersen. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1958 Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969;

M.D., Cornell, 1973 J. Gilbert Stone. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1964 Yvonne Vulliemoz. M.S., Lausanne, 1956; Ph.D., Paris, 1969 Sook Young Woo. B.S., Ewha Women's University (Seoul), 1968; M.D., 1972 Jen-Tieng Wung. M.D., Taipei Medical College, 1956

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Ana Maria Lobo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon Faculty of Medicine, 1967 Dorothy A. Black. B.A., Rutgers, 1957; M.A. Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1965 Donald C. Brody. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1956 Kathryn A. W. Cozine. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1961 Alber Faltas. M.D., Kasr-El-Ainy Medical School (Egypt), 1961

Carolyn P. Greenberg. B.A., Stanford, 1962; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1966 John W. Hennessey. B.S., Massachusetts, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1966 John T. Herbert. B.A., Columbia, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973 Marlise A. Ogilvie-Meier. B.S., Lausanne, 1963; M.D., Zurich, 1969 Kevin V. Sanborn. B.S., Manhattan, 1969; M.D., New York University, 1973 Medhat Riad Wassef. M.B., B.Ch., Cairo, 1957 Gerald S. Weinberger. M.D., New York University, 1948 Marcelle M. WiUock. B.A., New Rochelle, 1958; M.D., Howard, 1962 Joseph Chuan-Shih Yang. B.S., Taiwan, 1959; M.D., Medical Academy (Dusseldorf), 1964

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL STAFF ASSOCIATE

Salha S. Daniel, Ph.D. anesthesiology Carol Pantuck, B.A.

Mariagnes Verosky, B.A. In^ Lieberman, M.D.

Alvin Wald, Ph.D. Richard S. Mega, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

William F. Karl. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., 1951

ANESTHESIOLOGY 57

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Herbert G. Cave. M.D., Howard, 1947

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Elmer S. Foster. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Brussels, 1959 Jean B.M. Gilot. B.S., Lycee Jamel (Haiti) 1952; M.D., Medical School of Haiti, 1958 Archibald K. Hinds. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Montpellier,

1962 Gilbert Phanor. B.S., Lycee T. Gilboro, 1953; M.D., Medical School of Haiti, 1960 William M. Smith, B.A., Michigan, 1954; M.D., Zurich, 1966 Madisetti Swamy. M.B., B.S., Osmania (India), 1954 J. Sinclair Trimiar. B.S., Howard, 1960; D.D.S., 1960 Francis Weekes. B.S., Johnson C. Smith, 1941; D.D.S., Meharry, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Samuel C. Brisbane. B.A., Lincoln, 1937; M.D., Howard, 1949 Oscar N. Graves. B.A., Lincoln, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1949

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Henry A. Connolly, Jr. B.S., Fordham, 1951; M.D., Hamburg, 1955

Demetrios B. Kalas. M.D., Aristotelian, 1954

Mary Louise White. B.S., Maryland, 1943; M.D., 1945

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY Sami A.M. Abadir, M.D. Jane deV. Stark, M.D. Carol E. Zimmerman, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Ronald A. Andree. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1955; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1959

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Guglielmina Bettini, M.D. Anselma L. Canlas, M.D.

Han Chiang Lee, M.D. INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY Ignacia U. Ngo, M.D.

Robert F. Altschuler, M.D. Kristappa Sangavaram, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Professor

Louis S. Blancato. M.D., New York Medical College, 1945

58 ANESTHESIOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY

Assistant Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Ennio Gallozzi. M.D., Rome, 1953

Joseph lacovelli. B.A., Buffalo, 1952; M.D., Bologna, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Errol N. Harding. B.A., M.D., CM., McGill, 1949 Aino Tuul. M.D., Tartu (Estonia), 1942

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY

Hilda H.C. Liu, M.D. Julio M. Garcia-Rodriguez, M.D.

Alfred T.C. Peng, M.D. Byung Yang Kim, M.D.

Altagracia H. Polanco, M.D. Zdan J. Korduba, M.D.

Kyaw Nyunt, M.B., B.S.

Biochemistry

Robert Wood Johnson, Jr., Professor and Chairman

Isidore S. Edelman. B.A., Indiana, 1941; M.D., 1944 University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director of the Institute of Cancer Research). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S., Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1944

Professors

Richard Axel (also Pathology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 Reinhold Benesch. B.Sc, Leeds, 1941; M.Sc, 1945; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1950 Max A. Eisenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1938; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D.,

Duke, 1950 Philip Feigelson. B.S., Queens, 1947; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1951

Arthur Karlin (also Neurology). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Alvin I. Krasna. B.A., Yeshiva, 1950; Ph.D. Columbia, 1955 Seymour Lieberman (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S.,

Illinois, 1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941 Barbara W. Low. B.A., Oxford, 1942; M.A., 1946; D. Phil., 1948 Maurice M. Rapport (in Psychiatry). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940;

Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1946 Parithychery Srinivasan. B.Sc, Madras, 1946; Ph.D. 1953

Adjunct Professor

Benno P. Schoenborn. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1958; Ph.D., New South Wales (Australia), 1962

Associate Professors

Ruth E. Benesch. B.Sc, London, 1946; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1951 Allen M. Gold. B.A., Chicago, 1950; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Dezider Grunberger (also Public Health). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; ScD., 1968

Adjunct Associate Professor

John D. Karkas. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

BIOCHEMISTRY DERMATOLOGY 59

Senior Research Associate

David Elwyn (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950 Assistant Professors

George Alexander (in Psychiatry). B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953 Irving Goodman (in Surgery). B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., 1944 Ronald L. Hanson. B.A., Minnesota, 1965; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1970 Herbert L. Meltzer (in Psychiatry). B.S., Long Island, 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950 James L. Roberts (in International Institute for Study of Human Reproduction). B.S.

Colorado State, 1973; Ph.D., Oregon, 1977 Terrone L. Rosenberry (in Neurology). B.A., Oberlin, 1965; Ph.D., Oregon, 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Edith G. Gollub. B.S., Pennsylvania College of Pharmacy and Science, 1945; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1956; Ph.D., 1961

ASSOCIATE

Carola P. Zimmerman, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Mella Adlersberg, M.S. Jean Dayan, Ph.D. Martha Redden Kimball,

Ph.D. Irene E. Kochevar, Ph.D. Sahebarao Mahadik,

Ph.D. (in Psychiatry) A. S. Perumal, Ph.D. (in

Psychiatry)

RESEARCH {continued)

Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.

(in Obstetrics and

Gynecology) Marsha E. Reichman,

Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Susanna Yung Kwong,

M.S. Kuo-Peing Liu, M.A. Utapalendu S. Maitra,

Ph.D.

STAFF {continued)

Venkitachalem P. Mohan,

Ph.D. Barbara Rayson, Ph.D. Michael M. Rosen, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Erwin Chargaff, M.D. Zacharias Dische, M.D. (in

Ophthalmology) Karl Meyer, M.D. (in

Ophthalmology) David Nachmansohn,

M.D. (in Neurology)

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Adjunct Associate Professor

Theodore Peters, Jr. (in Medicine). B.S., Lehigh, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1950 Adjunct Assistant Professor

Leonard A. Sauer. M.D., Rochester, 1961; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1966

At Roosevelt Hospital

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE E. Glenn Armstrong,

Ph.D. Muriel Feigelson, Ph.D.

Dermatology

Professor and Chairman

Leonard C. Harber. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., New York University, 1953

60 DERMATOLOGY

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor of Clinical Dermatology

Lewis Shapiro (also Pathology). B.A., Duke, 1948; M.D., 1952

Clinical Professors

Saul L. Sanders. B.A., Kenyan, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1952 Dorothy Windhorst . B.A., Chicago, 1 948; M.D., 1 954

Associate Professors

Richard L. Edelson. Margarita S. Hutner.

B.A., Hamilton, 1966; M.D., Yale, 1970 B.A., Puerto Rico, 1936; M.A., Harvard, 1945; Ph.D., 1952

Associate Clinical Professors

Jack Eisert. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., State University of New York, 1956 James P. Fields (also Pathology). B.S., Texas, 1953; M.S., 1957; M.D., 1958 David N. Silvers (also Pathology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968 Richard A. Walzer. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Assistant Professors

Alan D. Andrews. B.S., Illinois, 1968; M.D., Virginia, 1972 Robert B. Armstrong. B.A., Haverford, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973 Maureen B. Poh. B.S., Siena, 1964; M.D., Tennessee, 1967 Robert R. Walther. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., North Carolina, 1973

Assistant Clinical Professors

Irving Abrahams. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New

York, 1954 Einar A. Juhlin. B.S., Illinois, 1950; M.D., Royal Charles (Sweden), 1957 Theodore A. Labow. B.S., Miami, 1951; M.D., Tufts, 1955 Gregory Zalar. B.S., George Washington, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

William G. Atwood, M.D. Vincent S. Beltrani, M.D. Steven R. Kohn, M.D. Jack H. Rozen, M.D. Eugene W. Sweeney, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Carole L. Berger, Ed.D. Julia M. Einbinder, M.S. Maria O. Longas

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Robert P. Feinstein, M.D. JeHery S. Kezis, M.D. Joseph A. Penner, M.D. Joseph S. Shapiro, M.D. Harvey I. Weinberg, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Leon K. Demar, M.D. Joan P. Noroff, M.D.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

Douglas Pravda, M.D. Luis A. Suarez, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER

J. Lowry Miller, M.D.

LECTURERS

Arturo L. Carrion, M.D.

Angelo A. Lamola, Ph.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY David Sibulkin, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Clinical Professor

Alexander W. Young, Jr. B.S., Maryland, 1944; M.D., 1946

DERMATOLOGY HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT 61

Assistant Clinical Professor

Peter C. Lombardo. B.S., Rochester, 1955; M.D., Albany, 1959

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Elaine V. DiGrande, M.D. Stanley J. Lewis, M.D.

Human Genetics and Development

Professor and Chairman

Robert S. Krooth. B.A., Stanford, 1948; Ph.D., London, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1957 University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director, Institute of Cancer Research). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S. Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St., Louis), 1944

Professors

Kimball C. Atwood. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., New York University, 1946

Arthur Bank (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., 1960

Arthur D. Bloom (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., New York University,

1960 Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (see Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A.,

Boston, 1949; M.D. , Tufts, 1955 Elvin A. Rabat (also Microbiology) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New

York, 1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Paul A. Marks (also Medicine) (Director, Cancer Center). B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D.,

1949 Orlando J. Miller (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950 Richard A. Rifkind (also Medicine) (Co-Director, Cancer Center). B.S., Yale, 1952;

M.D., Columbia, 1955

Professor of Mathematical Statistics and Genetics

Howard Levene (in Biological Sciences and Mathematical Statistics). B.A., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Columbia, 1947

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

John D. Rainer. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.A., 1944; M.D., 1951 Adjunct Professors

Sidney Udenfriend. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; Ph.D., New York

University, 1948 Arthur Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1947; Ph.D., Columbia,

1953 Herbert Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; Ph..D, George

Washington, 1957

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Dorothy Warburton, B.S., McGill, 1957; Ph.D., 1961 Adjunct Associate Professor

Ronald H. Kaback. B.A., Haverford, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1962

62 HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT MEDICINE

Senior Research Associates

Harold I. Calvin (in International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduc- tion). B.A., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1964 Donald R. Mills. B.A., Indiana, 1962; M.A., 1964; Ph.D., Illinois, 1968

Assistant Professors

Ann S. Henderson. B.S., Winthrop, 1960; Ph.D., North Carolina, 1966 Fred R. Kramer. B.S., Michigan, 1964; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1969 Dorothy A. Miller. B.A., Wilson, 1952; Ph.D., Yale, 1957 Roberta C. Reuben. B.A., Columbia, 1969; Ph.D., 1973

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Mary-Rita Greenwood (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Vassar, 1968; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1973

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES RESEARCH (conf/nued) STAFF ASSOCIATE

Ju-Fung Chen, Ph.D. Stephanie Phillips, Ph.D. Wendy Wen-Luan Hsiao,

Jye-Siung Fang, Ph.D. Francesco Ramirez, Ph.D. M.S.

Harlow K. Fischman, Ramana V. Tantravahi,

Ph..D. Ph.D. LECTURER

Julia B. Jones Ming Tsung Yu, Ph.D. Jerard Hurwitz, Ph.D.

Donald J. Komma, Ph.D. George F. Lam, M.S.

INSTRUCTOR Barry Potvin

Medicine

Professor of Clinical Medicine and Acting Chairman

Thomas Q. Morris. B.A., Notre Dame, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Arthur Bank (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D.,

Harvard, 1960 J. Thomas Bigger, Jr. (also Pharmacology). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Vincent P. Butler, Jr. B.A., St. Peter's, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Robert E. Canfield. B.S., Lehigh, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1957 Paul J. Cannon. B.A., Holy Cross, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958

Rose R. Ellison (in the Cancer Center). B.A., Barnard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1948 Andrew G. Frantz. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 DeWitt S. Goodman (Tilden-Weger-Bieler Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D.,

1955 Rejane M. Harvey. B.A., Vassar, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943 John N. Leob. B.A., Harvard, 1957; M.D., 1961

Paul A. Marks (Frode Jensen Professor) (also Human Genetics and Develop- ment). B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1949 Harold C. Neu (also Pharmacology). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1960 Hymie L. Nossel. M.B., Ch.D., Cape Town, 1953; Ph.D., Oxon, 1962 Elliott F. Osserman (American Cancer Society Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

MEDICINE 63

Benvenuto Pernis (also Microbiology). M.D., Milan, 1947

Richard A. Rifkind (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D.,

Columbia, 1955 John V. Taggart (also Physiology). M.D., Southern California, 1940 Donald F. Tapley. B.S., Acadia, 1948; M.D., Chicago, 1952 Gerard M. Turino. B.A., Princeton, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1948 I. Bernard Weinstein (also Public Health). B.S., Wisconsin, 1951; M.D., 1955 Arthur R. Wertheim. B.A., Dartmouth, 1935; M.D., Jefferson, 1939

Professors of Clinical Medicine

Felix E. Demartini. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1946

M. Irene Ferrer. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941

Donald A. Holub. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1952

Israeli Jaffe. BiS., New York University,/, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Edgar Leifer. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., Columbia, 1939;

Ph.D., 1941; M.D., 1946 Robert Palmer. B.A., Oberlin, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957

Professor of Social Medicine

Robert J. Weiss (also Psychiatry). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Clinical Professors

Hylan A. Bickerman. B.A., Columbia, 1934; M.D., New York University, 1939 Stuart W. Cosgriff. B.A., Holy Cross, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942 Kermit L. Pines. B.A., Columbia, 1937; M.D., 1942 John A. Wood. B.A., Harvard, 1943; M.D., 1946

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Physiology). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1952

Leslie Baer. B.A., Wisconsin, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Peter R. B. Caldwell. B.A., Dartmouth, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958

Leonard Chess. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1964; M.D., State

University of New York (Downstate), 1968 Robert M. Glickman. A.B., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 Ann S. Peterson. B.A., Cornell, 1950; M.D., 1954

Richard S. Rivlin (Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Michael M. Stewart. A.B., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Yale Enson. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1953 Wylie C. Hembree, III (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960;

M.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1964 Albert R. Lamb, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1940 George W. Melcher, Jr. B.A., Colorado, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946 Jane H. Morse. B.A., Smith, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 Frank R. Smith. B.A., Dartmouth, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Joseph G. Sweeting. B.S., Holy Cross, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1956 Henry M. Thomas, III. B.A., Haverford, 1950; M.D., 1957 Robert T. Whitlock. B.A., North Carolina, 1950; M.D., 1957

64 MEDICINE

Associate Clinical Professors

John O. Burris. B.S., Wyoming, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1956

John R. Edsall. B.A., Cambridge, 1945; M.B., B.Ch., 1948

Peter A. Gross. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Yale, 1964

Lionel Grossbard. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

George A. Hyman. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., 1945

Abbie I. Knowlton. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

Robert A. Kritzler. B.A., Columbia, 1936; M.D., Cornell, 1940

William Lovejoy. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1962

David J. McConnell. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., Yale, 1962

George H. McCormack, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Jay I. Meltzer. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Richard J. Stock. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947

Earl A. Wheaton, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Assistant Professors

Gerald B. Appel. B.A., Cornell, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

John P. Bilezikian. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Conrad B. Blum. B.S., Northwestern, 1969; M.D., 1971

Thomas A. Brasitus. B.A., Connecticut, 1967; M.D., Jefferson, 1971

Mary E. Charlson. B.A., Wellesley, 1968; M.D., Yale, 1972

Esteban Cvitkovic. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1969

Oliver T. Fein. B.A., Swarthmore, 1962; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1967

Steven M. Friedman. B.A., Princeton, 1968; M.D., Cornell, 1972

Glenda J. Garvey. B.A., Wellesley, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Elsa-Grace V. Giardina. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., New York Medical College,

1965 Peter Green. M.B., B.S., Sydney, 1970 James P. Halper. A.B., Columbia, 1965; M.D., 1971 Karen L. Kaplan. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1963; M.D., Ph.D., Chicago, 1969 Margaret M. Kilcoyne. B.S., Boston, 1958; M.D., Vermont, 1964 Jeffrey S. Lichtenstein. B.A., Franklin and Marshall, 1969; M.D., Tennessee, 1973 Hugh Nellans. B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971 Allen Bryant Nichols. B.A., Yale, 1961; M.D., Virginia, 1971 Martin W. Oster. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971 Constance Park (also Anesthesiology).

Fred Irwin Polsky. B.A., Texas, 1968; M.A., 1969; M.D., 1973 Stanley H. Rosenbaum. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969; M.D., Cornell,

1973 Ethel S. Siris. A.B., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Howard R. Steinberg. A.B., Williams, 1968; M.D., New York University, 1972 Alan R. Tall. M.B., B.S., Sydney (Australia), 1970 Francis M. Weld. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

David K. Blood. B.A., Amherst, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Norma M.T.W. Braun. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

John van B. Dean. B.A., Yale, 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1941

Robert H. DeBellis. B.S., Queens, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Ronald E. Drusin. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Dorothy Estes. B.C., Wheaton (Massachusetts), 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Kenneth C. Fine. M.D., Catholic (Louvain, Belgium), 1970

Robert H. Heissenbuttel. B.A., Thiel, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Thomas P. Jacobs. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1968

MEDICINE 65

Lynne L. Johnson. B.A., Wellesley, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Oscar Lebwohl. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1972

William M. Lee. B.A., Amherst, 1963; M.D.. Columbia, 1967

Robert McConnell. B.A., Hamilton, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Robin O. Motz. A.B., Columbia, 1959; Ph.D., 1965; M.D., 1975

Hans W. Neuberg. B.A., Wager. 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Carmen Ortiz-Neu. B.A., Wellesley, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Kenneth M. Prager. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1968

Marshall Primack. B.A., Louisville, 1961; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1965

James A. Reiffel. B.A., Duke, 1965; M.D.. Columbia, 1969

Edith B. ReiUy. B.A.. Smith. 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

John L. Roglieri. B.A.. B.S., Lehigh, 1960; M.D., Harvard. 1966

Martin J. Saltzman. B.A.. Columbia, 1967; M.D.. State University of New York

(Downstate). 1972 Harvey A. Schneier. B.A., Columbia, 1963, M.D., 1967 Peter E. Schrag. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., 1964 Allan Schwartz. B.S., City College, 1967; M.S.. Harvard. 1968; M.D.. Columbia.

1974 Alan H. Seplowitz. Melvin B. Weiss.

B.A.. Columbia, 1968; M.D., 1972 B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of New York (Downstate), 1967 Jack B. Weissman. A.B., New York University, 1966; M.D., Harvard. 1970 Gail S. Williams. B.A., Wellesley, 1964; M.D., Columbia. 1968

1962; M.D.. State

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Elizabeth R. Prichard. 1947

B.A.. Adelphi, 1943; M.S., New York School of Social Work,

Assistant Clinical Professors

Casco Alston, Jr. B.A.. Pennsylvania, 1936; M.D., Harvard, 1942

Alfred Becker. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Ralph S. Blume. B.A.. Amherst. 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

Michael H. Cohen. B.A.. Johns Hopkins, 1961; M.D., 1965

Clarence J. D' Alton. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Richard B. Duane, Jr. B.A.. Princeton. 1940; M.D.. Columbia. 1943

Juan G. Edreira. M.D., Havana. 1951

Daniel L. Larson. M.D., Columbia. 1946

Michael F. Parry. B.A., Yale, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Nicholas Rango. B.S., St. Louis, 1966; M.D., Northwestern. 1970

Jeffrey A. Stein. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Cornelius J. Tyson. B.A., Princeton, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

John M. Daley, M.D. George C. Hennig, M.D. Elias M. Kaimakliotis,

M.D. Arnold L. Lisio, M.D. Daniel L. Macken, M.D. Alan L. Saroff, M.D. Arthur L Snyder, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Stephen Birken, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES (continued)

Bonnie Bray, M.D.

Ben Dharmgrongartama,

Ph.D. Kwung-Ping Fu, Ph.D. Biswajit Lahiri, Ph.D. Chung Y. Liu, Ph.D. Frank B. Marxer, M.D. Parvin Merryman Mohammed M. Osman,

D.V.M. John Owen, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

(continued)

Ildiko Radichevich, Ph.D. Robert R. Sciacca, M.S. John E. Smith, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Howard J. Barnum, M.D. Eli Bauman, M.D. Randolph Cole, M.D. Ann P. D'Adama, M.D. Arthur R. DeSimone, M.D.

66 MEDICINE

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Lonnie B. Hanauer, M.D. Ralph Herz, Jr., M.D. Constantine P.

Ladapoulos, M.D. David M. McCarthy, M.D. Pier Mancusi-Ungaro,

M.D. Juan Oliver, M.D. Eduardo R. Pons, Jr.,

M.D. John E. Posdey, M.D. Jahangir Raafat, M.D. William H. Sherman, M.D. David B. Sutter, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

James A. Coss, Jr., M.D. Marvin E. Cramer, M.D. Helen-Ann Garcia, M.D. Joseph Heller, M.D. John E. McWhorter, M.D. Mato L. Marinovich, M.D.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

Milovan T. Rakic, M.D. Morris R. Rapoport, M.D. John M. Rodgers, M.D. Richard H. Runser, M.D. Arvind Kumar Shah, M.B. Jane S. Sillman, M.D. Adele Tedeschi, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Margaret Willhite, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Noriaki Adachi, M.D. Lieselotte Aron-Hott,

Ph.D. Lee Bennett Berman,

M.D. Deborah L. Brennan, B.S. Joseph M. Cerreta, Ph.D. Michael Drillings, M.S. Sylvia H. Ford, B.S. Donald L. Gammon, B.S. Masanobu Kawakami,

M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued)

Kalliope S. LaGamma,

B.S. John Pinto, Ph.D. G. Ranjbar-Omrani, M.D. John W. Riley, M.B., B.S. Joan L. Sobel, M.S. Mingzer Tung, B.S.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Henry Aranow, Jr., M.D. Andre P. Cournand, M.D. Hamilton Southworth,

M.D. Alfred Steiner, M.D.

LECTURERS Marcia B. Bull, M.D. Edward E. Fischel, M.D. Robert L. Letcher, M.D. Eric S. Lichtenstein, M.D. John H. McClement, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor

Joseph S. Lunn. B.A. (Upstate), 1958

Weslei/an, 1953; M.D., State University of New York

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

John S. Davis. B.A., Hamilton, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Walter Franck. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Herbert J. Marx. B.E.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Emery C. Herman. B.A., Emory, 1949; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1953

Gary S. Hoffman. B.A., Harpur, 1964; M.S., Howard. 1967; M.D., Medical College of

Virginia, 1971

William H. Mook. B.A., Wesleyan, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Allan G. Ramsay. B.A., Western Ontario, 1947; M.D., 1948 Robert S. Sioussat. B.A., Wesleyan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951

David W. Vaules. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; B.M.S., 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1963

Assistant Clinical Professor

Donald O. Pollock. B.A., Hamilton, 1951; M.D., Harvard, 1955

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Peter L. Arquin, M.D. Richard J. Horner, M.D. Alan J. Kozak, M.D. Don V. Lewis, M.D. Carolyn I. Mook, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

David S. Pratt, M.D. William H. Ramsey, M.D. Richard E. Reese, M.D. Dennis A. Savoie, M.D. William Streck, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

David S. Svahn, M.D. Gary Weaver, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Carole L. Nunamaker, M.D.

MEDICINE 67

At Harlem Hospital

Professors

John Lindenbaum. B.A.. Cornell. 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1959 Gerald E. Thomson. B.S., Queens, 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959

Clinical Professors

Harold S. Ballard. B.A.. California (Los Angeles), 1948; M.D., Meharry, 1952 Kenneth Sterling. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D.. Johns Hopkins, 1943

Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine

Charles P. Felton. B.Sc, Xavier. 1949; M.D., Geneva, 1956 Associate Clinical Professors

George C. Branche. B.A., Bowdoin, 1944; M.D., Boston, 1948

John B. Cromie. M.D., Belfast (Northern Ireland), 1949

William R. Cunnick, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Jeanne A. Smith. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957

Charles M. Yergan. B.S., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947

Assistant Professors

Anne M. Briscoe. M.A., Vassar, 1945; Ph.D., Yale, 1949 Clayton L. Natta (in Pathology). B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1961

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

1957; M.D., Toronto,

Mack Bonner, Jr. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Temple, 1965

Carol H. Bosken. B.A., Oberlin, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968

Jay Brown. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968

Peter C. T. Dickinson. B.S., McGill, 1958; M.D., 1962

Donald A. Feinfeld. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Marco D. Zarlengo. B.S., Regis. 1965; M.D., Creighton, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Marvin C. Cooper. B.S., Queens, 1960; M.D.. St. Louis, 1965 Milena L. Lewis. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Richard R. Prouty. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1948

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

John C. DiJohn, M.D. Pearl D. Foster, M.D. Paul KiUian, M.D. Anthony J. Marano, M.D. James J. Rafter, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

James T. T. Chien, M.D. Bennie W. Chiles, M.D. Carl A. Garnier, M.D. Major Geer, M.D. Ross T. Hamilton, M.D. Kenneth J. Herwig, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

James H. Hubert, M.D. John P. Jenkins, M.D. Thomas J. Mattimore Clarence S. Murray, M.D. Luigi M.F. Negri, M.D. Hazeline M. Nurse, M.D. Ruth C. Onukwue, M.D. Jon Rothenberg, M.D. David G. Savoge, M.D. Diane M. Sixsmith, M.D. Eric J. Vanderbush, M.D. Michael D. Williams, M.D. Lewis Z. Wright, Jr., M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Timothy P. BouHard, M.D. Aloysius B. Cuyjet, M.D. Raynard J. McDonald,

M.D. Douglas Miller, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER

Cecil G. Marquez, M.D.

68 MEDICINE

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professors

Michael Bernstein. M.D., New York Medical College, 1953

William F. Minogue. B.S., Seton Hall, 1951; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine

John J. Gregory. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1953; M.D., Albany, 1961

Associate Clinical Professor (Family Practice)

Donald F. Kent. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1935; M.D., 1940

Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine (Family Practice)

Richard N. Podell. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joel L. Duberstein. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961 Robert A. Fuhrman. B.A., Clark, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966 William N. Toth. B.S., Georgetown, 1956; M.D., Hahnemann, 1960

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Stephen J. Fischl, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Donald J. Brock, M.D. H. Oliver Brown, Jr., M.D. Kopel Burk, M.D. Andrew Coronato, Jr.,

M.D. H. William Diefendorf,

M.D. Charles E. Dooley, Jr.,

M.D. John T. Farry, M.D. Robert B. Francis, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Sidney E. Friedman, M.D. Samuel M. Gray, M.D. Thomas V. Inglesby, M.D. Robert P. Margie, M.D. Sanford M. Reiss, M.D. Melvin Rubinstein, M.D. R. Gregory Sachs, M.D. Robert R. Springer, M.D. Michael J. Tighe, M.D. Burton Tucker, M.D. William E. Wagner, Jr., M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Ian G. Becke, M.D. Joseph Belladonna, M.D. Charles W. Clarke, M.D. Joseph T. Faraldo, M.D. Mary T. Herlad, M.D. Eugene R. Kelly, M.D. Michael B. Kerner, M.D. A. Ralph Kristeller, M.D. David P. Miller, M.D. Lawrence J. Nastro, M.D. Steven J. Stanzione, M.D. Michael Suhl, M.D. Richard M. Weinberg, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Professors

Gerald B. Phillips. B.S., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Harvard, 1952 Harvey J. Weiss. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

Michael H. Grieco. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1957 A. Gregory Jameson. B.A., Harvard, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Clinical Professor

Philip H. Hennemann. B.A., Harvard, 1943; M.D., 1946

MEDICINE 69

Associate Professor

William Rosner. B.A., Wisconsin, 1954; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1961 Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Edward M. Dwyer III. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Arthur Karanas. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1958 Marianne J. Legato. B.A., Manhattanville, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1962

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard P. Ames. B.A., Williams, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Albert Attia. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.D., 1958

Albert W. Grokoest. B.S., Hamilton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943 Bruce H. Pinkernell. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1960; M.D., 1964 Henry G. Schaffeld. B.A., Columbia, 1938; M.D., 1941 Lawrence Scharer. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958 Herman Ziffer. B.A., Brooklyn, 1949; M.D., Chicago, 1953

Assistant Professor

Michelle P. Warren (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). A.B., Mount Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Le Clair Bissell. B.A., Colorado, 1955; M.D., 1958

Norman A. Cagin. B.S., Rutgers, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Harvey Benovitz. B.A., Washington & Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Robert Bernot. B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Buffalo, 1960

Earl B. Brown. B.S., Emory, 1938; M.D., 1942

Stanley R. Fine. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1957

James B. Gabriel. B.A., Brown, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1949

Oscar R. Garfein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., 1965

Henry M. Greenberg. B.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1968

Joseph A. Grossman. B.S., City College of New York, 1953; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1957 Julian B. Hyman. A.B., Columbia, 1945; M.D., Albany Medical College. 1947 Donald Kraft. B.S., Michigan, 1966; M.D., Cincinnati, 1970 David K. Meriney. B.A., Duke, 1956; M.D., 1960 William M. Nicholas. B.A., Williams, 1950; M.D.. State University of New York

(Syracuse), 1954 Myron C. Patterson. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D . 1943 Robert B. Tator. M.D., Columbia, 1948 Gerald Weintraub. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES (continued) RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

MEDICINE ^^^^^^ J j^.^^^^,,^ ^^ M. Saeed Khan, Ph.D.

Kenneth A. Altman, M.D. -^^^^^ ^ j^^^^^ ^ ^ Bruce A. Lages, M.D.

Wendy A. Aronson, M.D. Thomas M. Nail, M.D. William J. Vicic, M.D.

Albert Cohen, M.D. , i r\\- u ^>i r^

' John Olichney, M.D.

James Ducey, t u x/i c u INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

M.D.ki,M.D. ^"^^^ S^^^'-'^shaus, medicine

Robert K. Emy, M.D. ^ , , ,, c. m n Vernon G. Baker, M.D.

^ Nicholas V. Sterner, M.D. Michael Borecky, M.D.

70 MEDICINE

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

John Cornwall, M.D. Rosina B. Dixon, M.D. Jeanne Fastook, M.D. Carolyn E. Goodstein,

M.D. Antoine C. Harovas, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Peter L. Hofmann, M.D. Martin P.S. Kasofsky,

M.D. Edith J. Langner, M.D. David Loft, M.D. Loretta McQuillan, M.D. Anthony J. Pepe, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued)

Thomas D. Robinson,

M.D. Nicholas J. Rummo,

M.D. Alex Sahagian-Edwards,

M.D. Mark V. Sherrid, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Professors

John F. Bertles. B.S.. Yale, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1952

Peter R. Holt. B.Sc, Tolington, 1949; M.B.,B.S., London, 1954

Theodore B. Van Itallie. B.S., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1945

Professors of Clinical Medicine

A.L. Loomis Bell. B.S., Wesleyan, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947 William S. Clark. B.S., Dayton, M.D., St. Louis, 1938

Clinical Professor

Miles J. Schwartz. B.S., Queens, 1947; M.D.. New York University, 1951 Associate Professors

Robert B. Case. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Stanley Cortell. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 1957; M.D., Tufts,

1961 F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer. B.A., Oberlin. 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Harvey G. Kemp. B.A.. Oklahoma, 1955; M.D., Johns Hopkins. 1959 Richard N. Pierson, Jr. B.A., Princeton. 1951; M.D.. Columbia. 1955

Associate Clinical Professors

C. Redington Barrett. B.A.. Yale. 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Jonas M. Goldstone. B.A., Harvard. 1951; M.D., 1955

Myron C. Wright. B.A., Dartmouth, 1937; M.D., New York University, 1940

Senior Research Associate

Beatrice M. Fairchild. B.A., Hunter. 1942; M.A., Bryn Mawr, 1943; Ph.D., 1948 Assistant Professors

Richard Collens. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; M.D., New York

Medical College, 1 966 Alice Maniatis. M.D., Athens, 1960

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Judith Axelrod. B.S., Wellesley, 1963; M.D., Cornell, 1967 Robert S. Bernstein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., Harvard, 1965

MEDICINE MICROBIOLOGY 71

Airlee A.C. Cameron. A.B., Raddiffe, 1957; M.D., CM., McGill, 1961 Saul Kaplan. B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., Tennessee, 1959 Arthur J. Lennon. A.B., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Seiichi Shimomura. M.D., Okayama (Japan), 1945

Assistant Clinical Professors

William J. Athos. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., State University of New York

(Down state), 1956 Robert S. Beekman. B.A., Harvard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943 Donald P. Dallas. B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1954

George Dermksian. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.A., 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 James A. Feltman. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1944 Zane N. Gaut. B.S., Birmingham Southern, 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 John H. Keating. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1943

Richard S. McCray. B.A.. Wesleyan, 1954; B.D., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Edward H. Reisner. B.A., Columbia, 1935; M.D., 1939 Kenneth N. Weinstein. A.B. Vermont, 1955; M.D., New York University, 1959

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

MEDICINE

Charles G. Adsit, M.D.

Carlton Boxhill, M.D.

Jeffrey M. Brensilver,

M.D. Jean B. Case, M.D. Paul J. Chrzanowski, M.D. Edward W.D. Colt, M.D. Marlin Jay Frankel, M.D. Francis G. Geer, M.D. Richard L. Geltman, M.D. Maurice F. Goodbody,

M.D. Barry E. Goozner, M.D. William S. Hopewell, M.D. Gertrude Scott Lefavour,

M.D. Robert P. Lombardo, M.D.

ASSOCIATES [continued)

Allen H. Mogtader, M.D. Robert B. Roven, M.D. Jean W. Saleh, M.D. Eugene Santilli, M.D. Thomas T. Tamlyn, M.D. William A. Tansey III, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE William N. Poillon, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Samir Alam, M.D. Eric Andreae, M.D. Cecil B. Broderick, M.D. Hugh C. Davidson, M.D. Dulaney Glen, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued)

Lawson A. Moyer 111, M.D. Ernest C. Richards, M.D. Harry A. Roselle, M.D. Howard N. Schwartz, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Dennis G. Huskins, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Thalia Boussios, Ph.D. Katherine P. Porikos,

Ph.D. Jack Wang, M.S.

LECTURER

Marcelle Lavau, Ph.D.

Microbiology

John E. Borne Professor and Chairman

Harold S. Ginsberg. B.A., Duke, 1937; M.D., Tulane, 1941 Professors

Paul D. EUner (also Pathology). B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.D.. Southern California,

1952; Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 Bernard F. Erlanger. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.A., New York

University, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1951 Gabriel S. Godman (also Pathology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Elvin A. Kabat (also Human Genetics) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New

York, 1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Wladyslaw Manski (in Ophthalmology). M. Phil., Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw,

1951

72 MICROBIOLOGY

Benvenuto Pernis (also Medicine). M.D.. Milan. 1947

Henry J. Vogel (in Pathology). B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941

Adjunct Professor

Louis H. Muschel. Ph.D., 1953

B.S., New York, 1936; A.M., Columbia, 1938; M.S., Yale, 1951;

Assistant Professors

Dean L. Engelhardt. B.S.. Amherst, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1967

Marcia J. Ensinger. B.A., Cornell, 1967; Ph.D. Pennsylvania, 1973

David H. Figurski. B.S.. Pittsburgh, 1969; Ph.D. Rochester. 1974

Ramareddy V. Guntaka. B.S., Andhra (India), 1963; M.Sc, Agra (India), 1965; Ph.D.,

Kansas, 1970 David S. Hodes (also Pediatrics). B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Christine A. Milcarek. B.S.. Duquesne, 1968; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1972 Shcrie L. Morrison. B.A.. Stanford, 1963; Ph.D., 1966 Saul J. Silverstein. B.S.. Cornell, 1968; Ph.D., Florida, 1971 Charles S.H. Young. B.A., Oxford, 1966; D. Phil., 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Yvonne A. Lue. Ph.D., Columbia, 1976

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

Norbert H. Wasserman, Eng.Sc.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE

Louise A. Goode, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Sergio Biguzzi, M.D. Harriet Castleman, B.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued)

William L. Cleveland,

Ph.D. Lotte Kuhn Ulla Lindholm, Ph.D. Judyta Praszkier, Ph.D. Prasado Rao, Ph.D. Shunji Sugii, Ph.D. Giampaolo Tonda

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued)

Albert Ming-Tao Wu, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Charles L. Fox, Jr., M.D. Konrad C. Hsu, Ph.D. Beatrice C. Seegal, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Pathology

Angus C. Sampath. D.Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

At Roosevelt Hospital

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Azra Shahidi. M.S., Wisconsin, 1963; Ph.D., Missouri, 1967

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Professor

George A. Hashim (in Surgery). Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY 73

Neurological Surgery

Byron Stookey Professor and Chairman

Edward B. Schlesinger. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1934; M.D., 1938

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

James W. Correll. B.A., Brown, 1941; M.D., Cornell, 1944 Edgar M. Housepian. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953

Associate Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Peter W. Carmel. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960 James G. McMurtry III. B.A., Rice, 1953; M.D., Baylor, 1957 W. Jost Michelsen. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Joao Lobo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon, 1968

Thomas J. Bridges. B.A., Rochester, 1937; M.D., Cornell, 1941

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY Wilson Raddinq Ph D neurological SURGERY

Ronald Brisman, M.D. George L. Becker, Jr.,

Harvey R. Nova, M.D. M.D.

Donald Oliver Quest, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert W. Mackie. M.D., Long Island Medical College, 1944

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert W. Schick (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY George V. DiGiacinto, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

James E.O. Hughes. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

74 NEUROLOGY

Neurology

Henry and Lucy Moses Professor and Chairman

Lewis P. Rowland. B.S.. Yale, 1945; M.D., 1948

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Darryl C. DeVivo. B.A., Amherst, 1959; M.D., Virginia, 1964

Salvatore DiMauro. M.D., Padova (Italy). 1963

Stanley Fahn (H. Houston Merritt Professor). A.B., California (Berkeley), 1955; M.D.,

California (San Francisco), 1958 Eli S. Goldensohn (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., George Washington, 1937; M.D.,

1940 Arthur Karlin (also Biochemistry). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D.. Rockefeller. 1962 Robert E. Lovelace. M.B..B.S.. London, 1953; M.D., 1957 James H. Schwartz (also Physiology). B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York

University, 1959; Ph.D. Rockefeller, 1964

Professor of Microbiology and of Human Genetics and Development

Elvin A. Kabat. B.S.. College of the City of New York, 1932; M.A.. Columbia. 1934; Ph.D., 1937

Professors of Clinical Neurology

Abe Chutorian (also Pediatrics). B.A.. Manitoba, 1949; M.A.. 1950; B.S., 1952; M.D.,

1957 Arnold Gold (also Pediatrics). B.A., Texas. 1947; M.S., Florida. 1949; M.D.,

Lausanne, 1950 James F. Hammill. B.S.. LaSalle, 1947; M.D. Pennsylvania, 1948 Niels L. Low (also Pediatrics). M.D., South Carolina, 1940 Daniel Sciarra. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943

Professor of Physiology

John P. Reuben. B.A.. Grinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D.. Florida, 1959 Associate Professors

Lucien J. Cote (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954 Claude P.J. Chez (also Physiology). B.Sc. Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 William Allen Hauser (in the Sergievsky Center). A.B., Western Reserve, 1958; M.D..

St. Louis, 1962 Audrey S. Penn. B.A., Swarthmore, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Earl A. Zimmerman. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1963

Associate Professors of Clinical Neurology

M. Richard Koenigsberger (also Pediatrics). B.S.. Stanford, 1955; M.D., Chicago,

1959 Naunihal Sachdev Singh. M.B., B.S.. Vikram (India), 1959; M.D.. All India Institute

(New Delhi), 1962

NEUROLOGY 75

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert E. Barrett. B.S.. William and Mary, 1953; M.D., Medical College of Virginia,

1957 Linda D. Lewis. B.S., Bethany, 1961; M.D., West Virginia, 1965 Joseph L. O'Brien. A.B., Princeton, 1950; M.D.. Cornell, 1950 Rita G. Rudel (Medical Psychology). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1946;

M.A., New School for Social Research, 1949; Ph.D.. New York University, 1955 Margaret Seiden. B.S., M.B., M.D., London. 1949

Senior Research Associates

George M. Katz. B.E.E., College of the City of New York. 1942

Leon T. Kremzner. B.S., Seton Hall, 1949, M.S., Rutgers, 1952; Ph.D., 1955

Assistant Professors

Hai Won Chang. Ph.D.. Columbia, 1961

Arnold Eggers. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971

Eugenia T. Gamboa. B.A., Philippines, 1961; M.D., 1966

Daniel J. Goldberg (also Pharmacology). Ph.D., Yale, 1974

William G. Johnson. B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Columbia, 1967

Masataki Kawai. Ph.D., Princeton, 1971

James R. Miller. B.A., Amherst, 1960. M.D., New York University, 1964

Kuldup K. Sachdev. M.B.,B.S., Agre (India), 1957; M.D., Punjab, 1962

Stephen Shafer (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966;

M.D., Columbia, 1970 Stuart R. Snider. B.A., Northwestern, 1961; M.D., 1966 C. Dominique Toran-AIlerand (in International Institute for the Study of Human

Reproduction). B.A., Smith, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959 Joseph H. Willner. B.A., Hamilton College, 1966; M.D., New York, 1970

Assistant Professor of Anatomy

Abraham B. Eastwood. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1965; M.S., Lehigh, 1967; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Terrone L. Rosenberry. B.A., Oberlin 1965; Ph.D., Oregon, 1969

Assistant Professor of Neuropharmacology

Charles E. Pippenger. B.A., Ball State, 1961; M.A., 1962; Ph.D., Purdue, 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

David J. Adams. B.S., Rochester, 1965; M.D. Columbia, 1969

Frank K. Boschenstein. B.A.. Toronto, 1950; M.D., 1954

Robert A. DeNapoli. M.D., Harvard, 1954

Theodore A. List. B.A., Kalamazoo, 1963; M.D., Michigan, 1967

Richard Mayeux. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968; M.D., 1972

Marcelo Olarte. B.S., Marist Brothers, 1962; M.D., Cuyo, 1970

Morton Orentlicher. M.S., New York University, 1960; Ph.D., California, (Berkeley),

1966 Richard S. Schoenfeldt. B.A., Claremont. 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Sidney Starkman. B.A., Brooklyn College, 1966; M.D., Georgetown, 1970

76 NEUROLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professor

Stanley W. Holstein. B.S., George Washington, 1963; M.D., Georgetown, 1967 Jerome S. Resnick. B.A.. Pennsylvania, 1955; M.D., 1959 David L. Sagman. A.B., Hamilton 1955; M.D., Virginia, 1959 Hyman G. Weitzen. B.A., New York University, 1934; M.D., 1938

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Sidney M. Cohen, M.D. James F. CuUeton, M.D. Sarala A. Devi, M.B.,B.S. Robert A. Esser, M.D. Michael Fetell, M.D. Stanley Lesse, M.D. Charles R. Plank, M.D. Richard S. Rhee, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Vinayak Damle, Ph.D. William D. Niemi, Ph.D. A.L.N. Prasad, Ph.D. Michael Schonberg, Ph.D. Sidney Steinberg, B.A. Donald Wood, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Murray Engel, M.D. Damon M. Fellman, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Michael L. Gruber, M.D. Stanley L. Malkin, M.D. Alan F. Pertchik, M.D. Fereydoon Roohi, M.D. Gerald J. Smallberg, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Jean E. Collard, M.A.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Stephen C. Klass, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE

Leonard Zablow, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Philip Barnett, Ph.D. Ernest Bock, M.A. Robert N. Cox, Ph.D. Halina Den, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued)

Susan L. Hamilton, Ph.D. Helga Kutt, M.D. Stanley R. Resor, Jr.,

M.D. Samuel M. Schacher,

Ph.D. David S. Wise, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS

Sara Ginsburg, Ph.D. Harry Grundfest, Ph.D. Richard L. Masland, M.D. Carmine T. Vicale, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER IN BIOCHEMISTRY

David Nachmansohn, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor

William Amols. B.A., New York University, 1938; M.D., 1942 Assistant Clinical Professor

Lewis L. Hamilton. B.S., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology

John CM. Brust, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurology

Alfred C. Bannerman. B.Sc, Edinburgh, 1963; M.B.,Ch.B., 1966 Edward B. Healton. B.S., Oregon, 1964; M.D., Creighton, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professor

Bertel Bruun. M.D., Copenhagen, 1964

NEUROLOGY OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 77 INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Rafael Borras, M.D. William P. Duggan, M.D. Renee Malouf, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Neil Lombardi (also Pediatrics). B.A., M.D.. Boston, 1967

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Ann Geller, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Clinical Professor

Samuel F. Thomas. B.A.. Princeton. 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1940 Associate Clinical Professor

Carl W. Braun. B.A., Harvard. 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania. 1962 Assistant Clinical Professor

Sidney E. Bender. M.D.. Toronto. 1962

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Donald G. Rawlinson, M.D.

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Willard C. Rappleye Professor and Chairman

Raymond L. Vande Wiele (Director, International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). M.D.. Louvain, 1947

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Anesthesiology). B.A.. Gymnasium (Poland). 1941; M.D.,

Geneva, 1957 Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (also Human Genetics). B.A., Boston,

1949; M.D. , Tufts, 1955 L. Stanley James (also Pediatrics). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948 Orlando J. Miller (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D.,

1950 Allan G. Rosenfield (also Public Health) (Director Center for Population and Family

Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Professor of Biochemistry

Seymour Lieberman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois, 1937; Ph.D.. Stanford, 1941

78 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Professor of Reproductive Biochemistry

Ines Mandl. Ph.D., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1949 Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Henry Clay Frick II. M.D., Columbia, 1944

W. Duane Todd. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Associate Professors

Bruce A. Barron. B.A., Allegheny, 1955; Ph.D., Yale, 1965; M.D., New York

University, 1971 Roy H. Petrie. B.S.. Western, 1961; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1965 Raphael Jewelewicz. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1960

Associate Professor of Physiology

Michel Ferin. M.D., Louvain, 1964

Associate Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Edward T. Bowe. B.S., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Harold E. Fox. M.Sc, Rochester and Oxford, 1972

Wylie C. Hembree III (also Medicine). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D., Washington (St.

Louis), 1964 Gilbert J. Vosburgh. B.A., Princeton, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942 Susan W. Williamson. B.A., Vassar, 1939; M.D., Cornell, 1943

Associate Clinical Professors

Solan M. Chao. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Vincent J. Freda. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D.. New York University, 1952

David B. Moore. B.S., Hamilton, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Raymond U. McCaffrey. B.A., Fordham, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958

Assistant Professors

Inge Dyrenfurth. B.S., Wilhelm, 1942; M.Sc, Strasbourg, 1944; B.Sc, Heidelberg,

1947 Ming-Neng Yeh. M.D., National Taiwan, 1964

Assistant Professor of Anatomy

Daniel M. Linkie. Ph.D., Michigan, 1971

Assistant Professor of Endocrine Biochemistry

Richard B. Hochberg. Ph.D., Hahnemann, 1967

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Richard U. Levine. B.S., Tufts, 1962; M.D., Cornell, 1966 Harold Speert. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1935; M.D., 1939

Assistant Clinical Professors

Dean J. Grandin. B.A., Columbia, 1936; M.D., 1940 Wolfgang Tretter. M.D., Heidelberg, 1952

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 79

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Landis K. Crockett, M.D. Nabil W. Husami, M.D. Kevin B. Reilly, M.D. Lawrence J. Severino, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Lajos Bandy, M.S. Jye-Siung Fang, Ph.D. Hosea Fu-Shih Huang Stephen Keller, Ph.D. Henry R. Rey, M.S.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN

BIOCHEMISTRY

Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Isagani Villanueva, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Norman R. Bloch, M.D. Steven G. Kaali, M.D. Henry A. Sellner, M.D. Leonardo J. Yunis, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Margarita H. Hawkins, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Neil G. Anderson, Ph.D. Emily Glazer, M.S. Veeramac Prasad, Ph.D. Sylvia Rubin, M.Sc. Barbara Santee, M.Phil.

LECTURERS

Richard A. Bronson, M.D. Arnold N. Fenton, M.D. John L. Lewis, Jr., M.D. Paul S. Metzger, M.D. Kevin B. Reilly, M.D. David L. Rosenfeld, M.D. Anna L. Southam, M.D. Christopher Tietze, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Douglas H. Barns. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Balazs Selendy, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Mark E. Heller, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor

James A. Batts. B.A., Temple, 1937; M.D., Howard, 1941

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Hiroko T. Felton. M.D., Kansai (Japan), 1955

Assistant Professor

Samuel L. Bruce. B.A., Bridgeport, 1965; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Sunthorn Bunyaviroch. B.S., Chulalongkorn (Thailand); M.D., Mahidol (Thailand)

Young Sook Cho. M.B., Yonsei, 1955; M.D., 1959

Nomenida A. Lazaro. B.S., Santa Tomas (Philippines), 1960; M.D., 1965

Meredith F. Sirmans. B.S., Lincoln, 1961; M.D., Meharry, 1965

Esther S. Suarez. A. A., Santa Tomas (Philippines) 1955; M.D., 1960

Alfred J. Williams. B.A., Howard, 1960; M.D., Meharry, 1964

Assistant Clinical Professor

Stephen L. Matseoane. B.S., Fort Hare (South Africa), 1954; M.D., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1959

80 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Librado M. Bueno, M.D. Sitaram Vithal Chitnis, M.D. Hasi Das, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued)

Jean D. Joseph, M.D. Ashalatha Mital, M.B.,B.S. Rajasingham Rahulatharan, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Jean Rene, M.D.

Pisan Unchalipongse, M.D.

Arundhati H. Vinod, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Thomas F. Dillon. M.D., Georgetown, 1947

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Abraham Risk. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1957: M.P.H.. Johns Hopkins, 1969

Associate Clinical Professor

John F. Dwyer. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D.. Cornell, 1960

Assistant Professor

Michelle P. Warren (also Medicine). B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1961: M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Ernst G. Bartsich. M.D., Frankfort, 1962

Terusada Horiguchi. M. D., Kelo (Tokyo), 1961

Hamid Mootabar. M.D., Pahlavi (Iran), 1966; M.P.H., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

Margot Ammann. B.A., Vassar, 1944; M.D., New York Medical College, 1949 Alexander Coman. M.D., Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1948 David B. Crawford. B.S., North Carolina, 1943; M.D., New York University. 1946 Ivan J. Jacobson. B.A., Belgarde (Yugoslavia), 1948; M.D., 1955 Marcia L. Storch. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1955; M.D., Woman's Medical College of

Pennsylvania, 1973 Riley W. Waller. B.S., LeMoyne, 1943; M.D., Howard. 1947

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Muriel Feigelson. Ph.D., New York University, 1961

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Meera Prabat, M.B.,B.S. George S. Radney, M.D. Daniel A. Tsin, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Terry L. Andrews, M.D.

Frederick Clare, M.D.

Jaime H. Cremona, M.D.

Bialines Espinosa, M.D.

Nargess A. Hakimi-Ford, M.D. Naif K. Basile, M.D.

Bernardo Handszer, M.D. Charles H. Debrovner, M.D.

Gary M. Levine, M.D. Michael Harel, M.D.

LECTURERS

LECTURERS (continued)

Roger Hassid, M.D. Masood A. Khatamee, M.D. Robert M. Podel Fouad Surur, M.B.,B.Ch. Alvin Wesley

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY OPTHALMOLOGY 81

At St. Luke's Hospital

Professor

Robert S. Neuwirth (F. Huntington and Dorothy Babcock Professor). B.S., Yale, 1955; M.D., 1958

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Harold M. M. Tovell. B.A., Toronto, 1951; M.D., 1945

Associate Clinical Professor

Hussein K. Amin. M.B., Ch.B., Alexandria (Egypt), 1955

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Haider H. Shamsi. M.B., B.S., King Edward Medical College (Pakistan). 1965 Ivan K. Strausz. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Michael R. Cehelsky. M.D., Jan Kazimierz, 1941; Dr. of Med., Ceorg August, 1947 Ian G. Van Praagh. M.D., Toronto, 1955

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS [continued)

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY HumbertO Portillo, M.D.

Edison K. Azenha, M.D. Arnold Roufa, M.D.

Feliope Bozzo, M.D. Istvan P. Tornai, M.D.

Gerard de Catalogne, M.D. Olwen Joy Wellington, M.D.

Paul Filipescu, M.D. James T. Yang, M.D.

John Jakus, M.D.

E. Nicholas Klein, M.D. ASSISTANT in CLINICAL OBSTETRICS

Gyula Nemes, M.D. and gynecology

Adamandia G. Panayotopoulos, M.D. Malca Sane, M.D.

Ophthalmology

Edward S. Harkness Professor and Chairman

Charles J. Campbell. M.D., George Washington, 1948; B.S., Muskingum. 1949; M.S., Rochester, 1951; Med. Sc.D., Columbia, 1957

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Endre A. Balazs (Malcolm P. Aldrich Professor). M.D., Budapest, 1942 Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

Abraham Spector. Ph.D., New York University, 1957 Professor of Microbiology

Wladyslaw Manski. M.Phil., Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw (Poland), 1951

82 OPTHALMOLOGY

Professor of Pharmacology

Kenneth E. Eakins. Ph.D., London, 1962 Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Philip Knapp. B.A., Harvard, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941 Clinical Professors

Robert M. Day. B.A. Wesleyan, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1944 Ira S. Jones. B.A., Columbia, 1940; M.D., 1943

Associate Professor

Peter Gouras. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1951; M.D., 1955

Associate Professor of Physiology

Jorge Fischbarg. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago, 1971

Associate Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Andrew de Roetth, Jr. B.S., Northwestern, 1943; M.D., 1946 Anthony Donn. B.S., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952 Robert M. Ellsworth. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952 Max Forbes. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Chicago, 1957 Takeo Iwamoto. B.S., Nimeji (Japan), 1947; M.D., Tokyo, 1955 Francis A. L'Esperance, Jr. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Harold F. Spalter. B.A., Brown, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Stephen Trokel. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1959; Med. Sci.D., Columbia, 1965

Associate Professor of Ocular Physiology

Laszlo Z. Bito. B.A. Bard, 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1963 Associate Clinical Professors

William C. Cooper. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 John W. Espy. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 George M. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Albany, 1959

Assistant Professor of Biophysical Ophthalmology

Charles J. Koester. B.S., Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1950; Ph.D., Rochester, 1955

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

James P. Dillon. B.S., Canisious College, 1964; M.S., Columbia, 1973; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S., Miami, 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Myles M. Behrens. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

D. Jackson Coleman. B.S., Union College, 1956; M.D., Buffalo, 1960

Richard W. Darrell. B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959; Med. Sc.D., Columbia, 1965

OPTHALMOLOGY 83

R. Linsy Farris. M.D., Duke, 1961

Arnold W. Forrest. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., New York University, 1942

Frank B. Hoefle. B.A., Dartmouth, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1961

Frederick Jakobiec (also Surgical Pathology). B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., 1968;

Med.Sc.D., Columbia, 1971 Sally Moore (Orthoptics). B.S., Delaware, 1952 Balachandran D. Srinivasan. Ph.D., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1967 Emil Wirostko. B.S., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960; Med.Sc.D., Columbia,

1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Hugh M. Moss. Ellen F. Regan.

B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1954 B.A., Wellesley, 1940; M.D., Yale, 1943

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

William A. James, Jr., M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

E. Anita Anderson Ethel I. Anderson, Ph.D. Gerard Armand, Ph.D. John Heng Chen, M.D. William H. Garner, Ph.D. Prasud S. Kulkarni, Ph.D. Lu-Ku-Li, Ph.D. Jong J. Lim, Ph.D. Frederic L. Lizzi, Eng.

Sc.D. Kasimierz Malinowski,

Ph.D. Victoria Ozanics, M.S. Debutta Roy, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

David H. Abramson, M.D. Lawrence G. Pape, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Richard D. Banyard,

M.D. Howard M. Eggers, M.D. Donald H. Green, M.D. Albert J. Hofeldt, M.D. Richard G. Lennon, M.D. Lance D. Redler, M.D. Jaime Santamaria III,

M.D. Jesse L. Sigelman, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Heinz Rosskothen Charles Weiss, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Roger A. Baroody, B.A. Janet L. Denlinger, M.D. Helena M. Eakins,

D.Pharm. Mary T. Flood, B.S. Louise A. Franzen, B.A. Peter V. Pallai, Ph.D. Mary E. Smith, B.A. Elena Yablonskaya

SPECIAL LECTURER Frank D. Carroll, M.D. George R. Merriam, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Zacharias Dische, M.D. Karl Meyer, M.D.

LECTURER

Julius A. Vida, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Thomas A. Farrell. B.A., Hamilton, 1957; M.D., McGill, 1961

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Charles B. Deichman, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Herman C. Jordon, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Rajendra K. Bansal, M.B.

B.S. Andrew Goldstein, M.D. Antonio M. Gonzalez,

M.D.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

John p. Mitchell, M.D. Luis E. Taboada, M.D. Ram P. Tiwari, M.S.

84 OPTHALMOLOGY ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

James C. Newton. B.S.. Fordham. 1949: Ph.D.. 1953: M.D.. Jefferson. 1957

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL ASSISTANTS {^continued) ASSISTANTS (continued)

OPHTHALMOLOGY Bernard J. Fowler, M.D. Morton H. Seelenfreund,

Louis V. Angioletti, Jr., Dennis D. Freilich, M.D. M.D.

Richard S. Kochman, Howard K. Weisberg,

Ulises Arango, M.D. j^ j-, f^ q

Robert C. DellaRocca, Charles Merker, M.D.

^■°- Charlermpong Sarakhun, LECTURER

John Eden, M.D. j^ p Edward L. Raab, M.D.

Orthopedic Surgery

Frank Stinchfield Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery and Chairman

Alexander Garcia. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940: M.D.. Long Island College of Medicine, 1943

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

C. Andrew L. Bassett. M.D., Columbia, 1948: Med.Sc.D., 1955 Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Robert E. Carroll. B.A., Yale, 1938: M.D., 1942

S. Ashby Grantham. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1952: M.D., 1955 Charles S. Neer II. B.A., Dartmouth, 1939: M.D., Pennsylvania. 1942 Charles T. Ryder. B.S.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 1939: M.D.. Harvard, 1943

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Austin D. Johnston. B.A.. Columbia, 1945: M.D., 1947

Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George B. Ambrose. B.A., Columbia. 1940: M.D., 1943

Associate Clinical Professors

David L. Andrews, B.A., Williams, 1952: M.D., Columbia, 1956 Harold M. Dick. B.A., Princeton, 1956: M.D., New York University, 1960 NasS. Eftekhar. M.D., Teheran, 1960

Hugo A. Keim. B.S., St. Mary's (Minnesota), 1956: M.S., Northwestern, 1966: M.D., Loyola, 1960

Senior Research Associate

Arthur A. Pilla. B.S., St. Joseph's, 1958: M.S., Pennsylvania, 1958: D.Sc, University of Paris, 1964

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY 85

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rosamond Kane. M.D., Columbia, 1952

D. Keith McElroy. M.D., Toronto, 1941

Robert M. Reiss. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., 1959

James N. Worcester, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Assistant Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

John R. Denton. B.S., Howard A. Kiernan, Jr.

West Point, 1960; M.D., Medical College of Alabama, 1967 B.S.. Holy Cross, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Peter N. Carbonara, M.D. William U. Cavallaro,

M.D. Robert N. Dunn, M.D. Merle H. Katzman, M.D. Christopher B. Michelson,

M.D. Harvey Orlin, M.D. Thomas D. Rodda, M.D. Joseph E. Salvatore, M.D. E. Baldwin Self, Jr., M.D. William A. Sinton, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued)

L. Arne Skilbred, M.D. David M. Smith, M.D. Martin L. Sorger, M.D. Joel D. Weinstein, M.D. Eric K. Zeitzmann, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Harshad R. Chokshi,

Ph.D. Stephen B. Doty, Ph.D. Robert W. Pawluck,

M.B.A.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Louis U. Bigliani, M.D. Lawrence A. Lefkowitz,

M.D. Harvey S. Sicherman,

M.D. Ronald Tietjen, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Sharon M. Mitchell, B.S.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Marvin L. Shelton. B.S., Howard, 1951; M.D., 1956

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Aaron M. Gold, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

John B. Nailor, M.D.

Germukh S. Walha, M.D. (in Surgery)

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Alice L. Garrett. B.S., Washington State, 1944; M.D., Southern California, 1954 Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George Van B. Cochran. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1956; Med.Sc.D. 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Edward B. Leahey. B.A., Fordham, 1941; M.D., Georgetown, 1944 Raphael K. Levine. B.A., Brandeis, 1961; M.D., Jefferson, 1965

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Robert L. S. Boothe, M.D. Abraham C. Kovarsky, M.D.

86 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY OTOLARYNGOLOGY

At Roosevelt Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Andrew H. Patterson. M.D., Columbia, 1958

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC

SURGERY SURGERY

William G. Hamilton, M.D. Luther F. Warren, M.D.

James C. Parkes II, M.D.

Joel E. Rothermel, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Joseph W. Fielding. M.D., Toronto, 1946

Associate Clinical Professor

Robert E. Zickel. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D.. 1958 Assistant Clinical Professors

Ronald M. Match. B.A., Hofstra, 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957

George L. Unis. B.A., New York University, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1975

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Richard J. Cea, M.D. Sanford A. Ratzan, M.D.

Otolaryngology

Professor and Chairman

Maxwell Abramson. B.A., Wesleyan, 1957; M.D., Union (Albany), 1961

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Juergen Tonndorf. M.D., Kiel (Germany), 1938; Ph.D., Heidelberg, 1945 Professors of Clinical Otolaryngology

Robert M. Hui. B.A., Southern California, 1943; M.D., 1946

Robin M. Rankow. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1935; D.D.S., Columbia, 1940; M.D., Rochester, 1950

Professor of Clinical Audiology and Speech Pathology

Thomas H. Fay. B.A., Florida, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Illinois, 1958

OTOLARYNGOLOGY 87

Associate Professor of Auditory Biophysics

Shyam M. Khanna. B.Sc, Lucknow (India), 1951; D.R.E., St. Xavier College (Bom- bay), 1954; Ph.D., City College, 1970

Associate Clinical Professors

Lawrence Savetsky. B.A., New York University, 1951; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1955 Malcolm H. Schvey. B.A., Lehigh, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., Amsterdam,

1956

Assistant Professor

Andrew Blitzer (also Oral Surgery). B.A., Adelphi, 1966; D.D.S., Columbia, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai School of Medicine (New York), 1973

Assistant Professor of Biochemical Otolaryngology

Cheng Chun Huang. B.S., Taiwan, 1963; M.S., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., Iowa, 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology

Frank V. Mignogna. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1 965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Raymond M. Cole. B.S., Ohio State, 1952; M.A., 1953; M.D., Cincinnati, 1957

Robert C. Eberle. B.S., Northwestern 1951; M.D., 1954

John D. Piro (Prosthetics). B.A., Fordham, 1943; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Milton Ivker, M.D. Nicholas D. Pontilena, M.D.

Arthur B. Lacher, M.D. Raymond B. Strauss, M.D.

Richard S. Mega, M.D. Peter D. Westerhoff, M.D.

John Palesty, M.D. Carl Wiesenthal, M.D.

Lawrence J. Pizzo, M.D. Howard D. Zipper, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Errol. A. Thompson. M.B., University College (Dublin), 1936

Assistant Clinical Professor

Ransford C. Newman. M.B.,B.S., London, 1960; F.R.C.S., Edinburgh, 1968

At Roosevelt Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

John S. Lewis. M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1943

88 OTOLARYNGOLOGY PATHOLOGY

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Arshad H. Amjad, M.D. Maria Aramburu, M.D. Tay Bong Lee, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Stanley Whitfield. Certificate, Harris Academy, Dundee, 1940; M.B., Ch.B., St. Andrew's University Medical School, 1946

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY

Neville W. Carmical, M.D. Mauriciu Rodescu, M.D.

Pathology

Francis Delafield Professor and Chairman

Donald W. King. M.D., Syracuse, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Richard Axel (also Biochemistry). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970

William A. Blanc. B.A., Geneva, 1940; M.D., 1947; Ph.D.. 1952

Paul Ellner (also Microbiology). M.S., Southern California, 1952; Ph.D., Maryland,

1956 S. Raymond Gambino. B.S., Antioch, 1948; M.D., Rochester, 1952 Gabriel C. Godman (also Microbiology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D.,

1944 Conrad L. Pirani. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Ralph M. Richart. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D. Rochester, 1958 Virginia Tennyson (also Anatomy). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor,

1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Professor of Microbiology

Henry J. Vogel. BS., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., 1949

Professors of Neuropathology

Phillip E. Duffy. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1947

Leon Roizin (in Psychiatry). B.A., State Lyceum {Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1 936

Professor of Surgical Pathology

Nathan Lane. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1945

PATHOLOGY 89

Professors of Clinical Pathology

Arthur W. Branwood. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1942; M.D., 1948

Austin D. Johnston (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

Lewis Shapiro (also Dermatology). B.A., Duke, 1948; M.D., 1952

Adjunct Professors

Robert V. Hutter. B.A., State University of New York (Syracuse), 1950; M.D., 1954;

M.A., Yale, 1968 Harry L. loachim. M.D., Bucharest, 1949 George D. Lumb. M.D., Royal College of Physicians, 1946 Sidney Pestka. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961

Clinical Professors

John G. Gorman. M.B., B.S., Melbourne, 1953 Victor Herbert B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952 Pablo Rubinstein. M.D., Chile, 1962 Sheldon C. Sommers. M.D., Harvard, 1941 Bernard M. Wagner. M.S., Hahnemann, 1949

Clinical Professor of Oral Pathology

Melvin N. Blake. D.D.S., New York University, 1955

Associate Professors

Cecilia M. Fenoglio. B.S., St. Elizabeth, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 John J. Fenoglio, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 John P. Nicholson (also Pediatrics). B.S., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1958 Nicole Suciu-Foca (in Surgery). B.S., Bucharest (Rumania), 1959; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professor of Comparative Pathology

Ross M. Grey. D. V.M., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1945

Associate Professor of Dentistry

David J. Zegarelli. B.A., Columbia, 1965; D.D.S., 1969

Associate Professors of Neuropathology

Lester M. Geller. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.A., Michigan State, 1948; Ph.D., New York

University, 1953 Mavis Kaufman (in Psychiatry). M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Associate Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Richard F. Defendini. B.A., Michigan, 1948; M.A., 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borek (in Radiology). B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weitzmann Institute (Israel), 1967 Arline D. Deitch (in Anatomy). B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1954

90 PATHOLOGY

Reba A. Goodman. B.A., Indiana, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1952; Ph.D., 1955

Mary E. King. B.A., Smith, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Myron Tannenbaum (in Urology). B.S., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955;

Ph.D., 1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961 Ruth H. Vogel. Ph.D., New York University, 1958

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatric Pathology

H. Joachim Wigger. M.D., Hamburg, 1954

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Karl Perzin. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958

Marianne Wolff. B.A., Hunter, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ernest Baden. M.A., Sorbonne, 1946; D.D.S., New York University, 1950; M.D.,

Geneva, 1962 M. Richard Pachter. M.D., Zurich, 1956 William Pollack. M.S., Rutgers, 1950; Ph.D., 1964 Robert R. Rickert. B.A., Michigan, 1958; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1962 Harry H. Stumpf. B.A., New York University, 1947; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1951 John A. Terzakis. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 Kaity Yannopoulos. M.D., Greece, 1954 Frederick T. Zugibe. B.S., St. Francis, 1951; M.S., Chicago, 1959; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Irwin A. Almenoff. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1952

Daniel W. Benninghoff. B.A., Yale, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Donald E. Brown. M.D., Harvard, 1943

John M. Budinger. B.S., Northwestern, 1950; M.D., 1954

David N. Silvers (also Dermatology). A.B., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968

Stanley Simbonis. B.S., Yale, 1953; M.D., 1957

Harold J. Sobel. B.A., Brooklyn, 1950; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1954

Richard L. Swarm. B.A., Washington {St. Louis), 1949; M.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

Larry I. Crawshaw (also Rehabilitation Medicine).

Seth Goldberg. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1966; B.A., California,

1964; M.D. State University of New York (Downstate), 1970 Michael N. Koss. B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Stanford, 1970 Daniel M. Knowles. B.A., Bridgeport, 1969; M.D., Chicago, 1973 Ricardo Mesa-Tejada. B.S., Manhattan, 1964; M.D., Madrid, 1970 Armand Miranda. B.S., Columbia, 1969; Ph.D., 1973 Fred G. Silva II. M.D., Oklahoma, 1972 David J. Zegarelli (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1965; D.D.S.,

1969

Assistant Professor of Neuropathology

Arthur P. Hays. B.A., Dartmouth, 1962; B. Med. Sci., 1963; M.D., Colorado, 1966

PATHOLOGY 91

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Herbert Harden. B.S., Brooklyn, 1952; M.S., New York University, I960; Ph.D., 1964

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pathology

Thomas A. Blumenfeld. A. A., North Carolina, 1960; M.D., Tennessee, 1964

Kenneth Button. B.A., Indiana, 1966; M.D., 1970

Thomas M. Fasy. B.S., St. Joseph's, 1963; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1968

Robert Galen. B.A., Boston, 1966; M.D., 1970

Mary M. L. Lee. A.B., Hunter, 1963; M.S., Michigan, 1964; Ph.D., Columbia, 1972

Gerda Nette. B.S., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., 1973

Michael Pesce. B.S., St. Johns, 1967; Ph.D., 1971

Philip Tomashefsy (in Urology). Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Nicholas J. Willson. B.S., Saint Peter's, 1959; M.D., Seton Hall, 1963

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Solange G. Abunassar. M.D., American (Beirut), 1968

Majid Ali. M.B., B.S., Punjab (India), 1963

Paul Bachner. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Harry Woodson Carter. M.D., Harvard, 1957

Larry E. Douglass. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1959; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1960

Howard B. Goldstein. B.A., Colgate, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959

Arthur I. Hurvitz. D.V.M., Michigan State, 1964; Ph.D., California (Davis), 1967

Catherine Kambolis. M.D., Athens, 1955

Paul A. Krieger. B.S., City College, 1967; M.D., New York Medical College, 1971

Basil Moumgis. M.D., Pittsburgh, 1949

Robert D. Newman. B.S., California (Los Angeles), 1958; M.D., 1962

Joseph E. O'Brien. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1961 Edwarda Rorat. M.D., Stettin (Poland), 1959 Daniel R. Weiss. B.S., Queens, 1950; M.D., New York Universtiy, 1954

Assistant Clinical Professors

Giles G. Allard. B.A., Montreal, 1944; M.D., Laval, 1950

Lucretia Allen. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1952 Ada B. DeChabon. B.S., Liceo Senoritas (South America), 1949; M.D., Buenos Aires,

1957 Stefan E. Epstein. B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., State University of New York

(Buffalo), 1960 Hiroshi Nakazawa. M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1958

Henry G. Schriever. B.A., Vermont, 1956; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960 Ralph W. Snyder. B.S., McGill, 1951; M.D., 1953

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SPECIAL LECTURERS

PATHOLOGY PATHOLOGY Lester R. Cahn, D.D.S.

May Parisien, M.D. Marguerite M. Duby, M.D. David Cowen, M.D.

Heidrun Zweitnig- Milagros Ona-Sarino, M.D. q Zent Garber, M.D.

Rotterdam, M.D. Elena Zegarelli-Schmidt, Abner Wolf M D Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES LECTURERS

Mary Parshley, Ph.D. STAFF ASSOCIATES Michael Baden M.D.

Moshe Rosen, Ph.D. Mary C. Moran, Ph.D. Hyman Donnenfeld, M.D.

Tuan Due Pham, Ph.D. janjg p. Klavins, M.D.

David Spain, M.D.

92 PATHOLOGY

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor

Clinton Van Z. Hawn. B.A., Williams, 1937; M.D., Harvard, 1941

Associate Clinical Professor

Charles A. Ashley. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D., 1947; M.S., Illinois, 1951

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

Harlan D. Alpern, M.D. Charles A. Ellsworth, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor

Jack W. C. Hagstrom. B.A., Amherst, 1955; M.D., Cornell, 1959

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Theophilus Roberts. M.D., Meharry, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Prem Chauhan. F. Sc. Med., Punjab (India), 1942; M.D., B.S., 1948 Carlos Navarro. B.S., National University (Mexico), 1947; M.D., 1955 Angus C. Sampath (in Microbiology). D. Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

Assistant Professor of Medicine

Clayton L. Natta. B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1957; M.D., Toronto, 1961

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Mathieu A. Seide. M.D., Port-Au-Prince (Haiti), 1960

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Luritz C. Creque, M.D. Louys Thomas, M.D. Noel N. Weekes, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Anthony Marchand. B.A., Connecticut, 1966; M.D., Duke, 1970

Joel A. Roth. B.A., Brooklyn, 1964; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1968

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Frederick van Lente, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Clinical Professor

Rudolf Garret. M.D., Poland, 1939

PATHOLOGY PEDIATRICS 93

Associate Clinical Professors

John Y. Kiyasu. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1951; Ph.D., 1955

Louise L. Phillips. B.S., William and Mary, 1934; M.D., Columbia, 1940; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Clinical Professors

Lazarevic Bozidar. M.D., Belgrade, 1956

John J. Di Re. B.S., McGill, 1953; M.D., George Washington, 1957 Martin S. Krumerman. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., 1965 Maria A. Skerlavy. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Vijai Katatikarn, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Robert Pascal. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., 1962

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Stephen F. Ryan. M.D., Colorado, 1961

Associate Clinical Professor

Artemis D. Nash. B.A., Smith, 1949; M.D. Columbia 1953

Assistant Clinical Professor

Harold P . Gaetz . B.S., McGill, 1 953; M.D., 1 958

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Petra Elena P. Banogon, M.D. Corazon S. Sian, M.D. Monica Chao Yang, M.D.

Assistant Professor

Deng Fong Liau . M. Sc. , McGill, 1 968; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Derek Englander. M.D., Royal College (London), 1963

Pediatrics

Reuben S. Carpentier Professor and Chairman

Michael Katz (also Public Health). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963

94 PEDIATRICS

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Arthur D. Bloom (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Harvard, 1956;

M.D., New York University, 1960 Ralph Dell. B.A., Pomona, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961 Welton M. Gersony. B.A., Syracuse, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Upstate), 1958 L. Stanley James (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Otago (New Zealand),

1948 Robert B. Mellins. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1952 Sergio Piomelli. B.A., Liceo Sannazzaro (Naples), 1948; M.D., Naples, 1954 Myron Winick (Williams Professor and Director of Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.S., Illinois, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1956 Robert W. Winters. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., Yale, 1952 James A Wolff. B.A., Harvard, 1935; M.D., New York University, 1940

Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Abe Chutorian (also Neurology). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; B.S., 1952; M.D., 1957 Arnold R. Gold (also Neurology). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D.,

Lausanne, 1950 Sylvia P. Griffiths. B.A., Hunter, 1944; M.D., Yale, 1948 Niels L. Low (also Neurology). M.D., South Carolina, 1940

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

H. Donald Dunton. M.D., Rochester, 1945

Clinical Professor

David Shaffer (also Psychiatry). M.D.. London, 1961

Clinical Professors of Pediatric Psychology

Edmund W. Gordon. B.S., Howard, 1942; B.D., 1945; M.A., American, 1950; Ed.D.,

Columbia, 1957 Michael Lewis. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1958; Ph.D., 1962

Associate Professors

Jo Anne Brasel (in Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Colorado, 1956; M.D., 1959 Nicholas Cunningham (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns

Hopkins, 1955 William C. Heird. B.S., Maryville, 1958; M.S. Vanderbilt, 1963; M.D., 1964 Allen I. Hyman (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical

College, 1959 Ehud Krongrad. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1965 Gilbert W. Mellin. B.S., Bethany, 1945; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949 Akira Morishima. M.D., Keio (Japan), 1954; Ph.D., 1961 John P. Nicholson (also Pathology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1958 Michael R. Rosen (also Pharmacology). B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University

of New York (Downstate), 1964

PEDIATRICS 95

Pedro Rosso (in Obstetrics & Gynecology and Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D.,

Chile, 1966 David Rush (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Katherine Sprunt. B.A., Wellesley, 1942; M.D:, Johns Hopkins, 1945

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Russell S. Asnes. B.A., Boston, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1963

Jennifer J. Bell. B.A., Swarthmore, 1953; M.D., New York, 1961

William J. Davis. B.A., Wilkes, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

John M. DriscoU. B.A., Hamilton, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1962

Susan G. Gordon. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1946; M.D., Howard, 1950

Jerry C. Jacobs. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1956

M. Richard Koenigsberger (also Neurology). B.S., Stanford, 1955; M.D., Chicago,

1959 Anthony Mansell. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., Ohio State, 1965 Jane Pitt. B.A., Radcliffe, 1960; M.D. Harvard, 1964 Anneliese L. Sitarz. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Carl N. Steeg. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1962 Dorothy Warburton (in Human Genetics and Development). Ph.D., McGill, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

Fred Agre. B.A., Lafayette, 1957; M.D., Duke, 1961

Robert Appleby. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

William A. Bauman. B.S., Harvard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1947

Douglas S. Damrosch. B.A., Columbia, 1937; M.D., 1940

John J. Kangos. B.S., Rutgers, 1945; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1948

Andrew P. Mezey. B.S., Wisconsin, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Jack Shiller. B.A., North Carolina, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Joseph A. Silverman. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Leo F. J. Wilking. B.S., Harvard. 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Assistant Professors

Thomas Anderson. B.S., Valdosta State, 1966; M.D., Medical College of Georgia,

1971 Stephen J. Atwood. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972 Janna C. Collins. B.A., Radcliffe, 1965; M.D., New York University; 1972 Gabriel G. Haddad. B.S., American (Berirut), 1969; M.D., 1972 David S. Hodes (also Microbiology). B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Allan J. Hordof. B.A., Hobart, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966 Adrien Moessinger. M.D., Lausanne, 1971 Martin A. Nash. B.A., Duke, 1960; M.D., 1964 Nigel Paneth (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968;

M.D., Harvard, 1972; M.P.H., Columbia, 1978 Leila M. Pang (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of

New York (Down state), 1970 Tove Rosen. B.A., Rochester, 1961; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1965 Karl F. Schulze. B.A., Carleton, 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1965 S. Alex Stalcup. B.A., Whittier College, 1967; M.D., California, 1971 Raymond I. Stark. B.S, Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1970 Michael A. Weiner. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1968; M.D., State University of New

York (Upstate), 1972

96 PEDIATRICS

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Mihaly Bartolos (in Human Genetics and Development). M.D., Heidelberg, 1960 Bernard R. Feldman. B.S., William and Mary, 1955; M.D., Chicago Medical School,

1959 Charles Feldman. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1970 Burton Grebin. B.A., Adelphi, 1962; M.D., New York Medical College, 1966 Constance J. Hayes. B.S., St. Rose, 1959; M.D., Loyola, 1965 Donald E. Hutchings (also Psychiatry). B.A., Lake Forest, 1959; M.A., Chicago, 1963;

Ph.D., 1965 Celia Ores. M.D., Berne (Switzerland), 1956

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rose G. Ames. B.A., Barnard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Soja P. Bennett. B.S., Whitworth, 1964; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1968

Alexander Blum, Jr. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947

Frederick M. Bomback. B.A., Brandeis, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College,

1969 Joseph M. Bordiuk. B.A., Colgate, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958 Matilda B. Brust. B.A., Marietta, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Roger Challop. B.S., Brooklyn, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967 Yvonne T. Driscoll. B.A., Trinity, 1958; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsyl- vania, 1962 T. Donald Eisenstein. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1952; M.D., Albany Medical College,

1956 Margureite J. Gates. B.A., Barnard, 1950; M.D. Columbia, 1954 Gustave Gavis. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Thurman B. Givan, Jr. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Stephen Glaser. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Bertram H. Grossman. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Georgetown, 1959 Jeannette J. Jansky. M.S., City College, 1960 Murray D. Kuhr. B.S., Cincinnati, 1961; M.D., Chicago, 1965 Betty C.M.L. Kuo. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964 George Lazarus. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Dean N. Martin. B.A., Hofstra, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1963 Harriet E. McGurk. B.A., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973 Shirley A. Mayer (in Public Health). B.A., Hunter, 1940; M.D., Chicago, 1943 Daniel J. Melia. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1949 Harriette R. Mogul. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1965 Damyanti Moorjani (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant

(Bombay), 1957 Gilda Morillo-Cucci. M.D., Phillipines, 1962; M.P.H., Columbia, 1975 Stanley Morrison. B.A., Temple, 1963; M.D. , George Washington, 1967 Michael Novogroder. B.S., Brooklyn College, 1965; M.D., State University of New

York, 1969 Herbert Poch. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953 Morton H. Rachelson. B.A., Syracuse, 1946; M.D., Tulane, 1950 Margaret M. Rice. B.S., Marymount, 1943; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Roderick C. Richards. B.A., Cornell, 1945; M.D., 1948 Louis Rodregues. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.D., State University

of New York (Downstate), 1959 Albert P. Rosen. B.B., North Carolina, 1939; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine,

1943

PEDIATRICS 97

John S. Rosmaita. B.A., St. Peter's, 1953; M.D., State University of New York, 1957

Edith M. J. Kuo-Ying Shen. M.D., Ludwig-Maximilian (Munich), 1960

Kung-Tso Sheng. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai), 1954

Elliot J. Siegel. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1954; M.D., 1968

Gilbert Simon. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Rochester, 1962

William H. Smith. B.A., Rochester, 1941; M.D., 1944

David Stiles. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943

Martin B. Vita. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., 1954

Robert C. Wheeler. B.A., Princeton, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

William W. Whitten. B.A., Wesleyan, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947

Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

Edwin A. Goldstein. B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Maryann J. Colenda, M.D. John L. Costa, M.D. Ruth U. Donovan, M.D. Martin H. Jacobs, M.D. Alan Kanter, M.D. Peter F. Migel, M.D. Joan A. Regan, M.D. Malcolm S. Schwartz,

M.D. Robert M. Schwartz, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES William B. Bell, M.D. Grace Leidy, M.D. Frank T. Nakamura, B.S. Rajasekhar

Ramakrishnan, Sc.D. Gail Wasserman, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Martha L. Amarant, M.D. Robert A. Boxer, M.D. William J. Chernack, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Agnes D. Dilworth, M.S.S. Arlene Falk, M.D. Stanley H. Gilbert, Jr.,

M.D. Nora Haddad-Farkouh,

M.D. Robert A. Hands, M.D. Michael L. Lapkin, M.D. William L. Lupatkin, M.D. Joan Mathews, M.D. Sylvia Morgan, M.D. Mary R. Richards, M.D. Morton J. Seligman, M.D. John G. Slater, M.D. D. Loren Southern, M.D. Ching-Rong Tsai, M.D. David H. Wisotsky, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Alma T. Blitz, M.D.

Bernard Etra, M.D.

Mathew Feldman, M.D.

Laura Diane Popper, M.D.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

Rosalinda Rubenstein,

M.D. Susan Skalsky, M.D. Samuel T. Wilmit, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Bernadette Fiscina, M.D. Mysore R. Gandhi, M.S. Richard R. Henrich, B.S. Hung-Fai Law, M.S. Joel S. Lipset, M.A. Arleine Mcllveen, A.A.S. Catherine Muttart, M.S. Takayuki Nogawa, M.D. Emi Okamoto, M.D. Mark D. Starr, Ph.D. Phyllis Taterka, M.S. Christine L. Zucker, M.S.

LECTURERS

Albert Aharon, M.D. Armond V. Mascia, M.D. Herbert Rosenkrantz, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Eugene L. Klenk. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D. Temple, 1962

Assistant Clinical Professor

Joe H. Cannon. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1942; M.D., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS Allan S. Cunningham, M.D. John G. Freehafer, M.D.

98 PEDIATRICS

At Harlem Hospital

Professor

Erich J. Kahn. M.B., B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1940

Associate Professor

Margaret Heagerty. B.A., Seton Hill, 1957; B.S., West Virginia, 1959; M.D., Pennsyl- vania, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Wiener Leblanc. B.S., Haiti, 1950; M.D., 1956

Gene-Ann Polk. B.A., Oberlin, 1948; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylva- nia, 1952; M. P. H., Columbia, 1958

Assistant Professor

Barbara C. Dangman. B.S., Bucknell, 1968; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Araceli R. Ancajas. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1961

Josephine Kerr. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., New York University, 1951

Yusuf M. Khakoo. M.B., B.S., Bombay, 1962

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning. B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1949

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Viruppamattam Augustin, M.B., B.S. Myrna T. Aquino, M.D.

Serge Fenelon, M.D. Kuang-Chung Hu Chien, M.D.

Delore J. Gayle-Thompson, M.D. Vincent E. Hutchinson, M.B., B.S. Marguerita A. Silvera, M.D. Claudina Y. Wallace, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

Solomon J. Cohen. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1951 Gloria Schrager. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylva- nia, 1948

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joseph I. Boylan. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Yale, 1955

Frederick C. Braun, Jr. B.S., Georgetown, 1951; M.D., Jefferson, 1955

Burton M. Feinsmith. B.S., Arkansas, 1949; M.S., Florida, 1951; M.D., Berne, 1961

George M. Gill. B.S., Dickinson, 1954; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1958

Benjamin H. Josephson. B.S., North Carolina, 1949; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1952 Joseph Kalbacher. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Cornell, 1946

PEDIATRICS 99

John H. Krikorian, B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1963

Carolkay Lissenden. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Woman's Medical College of

Philadelphia, 1964 Lewis I. Sank. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1957; M.D., 1961 Frederic A. Schulaner. B.S., Tufts, 1955; M.D., 1959 Margaret E. Symonds. M.B., London, 1941; B.S., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Arnold N. Constad, M.D.

Paul A. Kearney, M.D.

Barry Lauton, M.D.

Wayne D. Stettler, M.D.

Charles B. Terhune, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Paul Avondoglio, M.D.

Frank P. Frenda, M.D.

Carl H. Herman, M.D.

Victor S. Lamberto, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Vinnakota V. P. Rao, M.D. Dudley A. Roberts, M.D. James Sorger, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Professor of Pediatrics

Louis Z. Cooper. B.S., Yale, 1954; M.D., 1957

Associate Clinical Professor

Phillip R. Ziring. B.A., New York University, 1958; M.D., 1962

Assistant Professors

Elena B. Klein. M.D., State Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1953; Ph.D., Institute of Microbiology (Rumania), 1972

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatric Psychology

Madeline W. Appell. B.A., Queens, 1962; M.A., 1963

Jeanne Brooks-Gunn. B.A., Connecticut College, 1969; Ed.M., Harvard, 1970; Ph.D.,

Pennsylvania, 1975 Nathan A. Fox. B.A., Williams, 1970; Ph.D., Harvard, 1975

Assistant Clinical Professors

Anastasios Anastasiades. M.D., Athens, 1950

Herbert I. Cohen. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

Gisela T. Dalrymple. M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1951

Joan M. Flanigan. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1962; M.D., 1966

Erwin Friedman (Pediatric Psychology). Ph.D., Peter (Budapest), 1949

Harry Kimmel. B.A., St. Andrews (Bucharest), 1940; M.D., Bucharest, 1949

Neil Lombardi (also Neurology). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967

Lucie Rudd . B.S., Paris, 1 933; M.D., 1 940

Marianne Schwob. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956

Sayenna A. Uduman. D.M.E.S., Kilpauk (India), 1963; M.D., Madras, 1966

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Robert Antar, M.D.

William R. Brown, M.D.

Martha F. Davison, M.D.

Rita H. Fischer, M.D.

Renata Frenkel, M.D.

Rodney L. Hite, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Joseph Holahan, M.D. Nancy Holahan, M.D. Flora Ramirez, M.D. Melanie Rivenzon, M.D. Nathan E. Saint-Amand, M.D.

100 PEDIATRICS PHARMACOLOGY

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Doris L. Wethers. B.S., Queens, 1948; M.D., Yale, 1952

Assistant Clinical Professors

Dennis Allendorf. B.S., Georgetown, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College, 1970 Zachary Finkelberg. B.S., Queens, 1962; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate) , 1966 Fadel M. Hochroth. B.A., Louisville, 1953; M.D., 1957 William Kaloss. M.D., State University of New York, 1954 Catherine Lodyjensky. M.D., Montreal, 1943

Rogelio F. Lucas. A. A., University of the East (Manila), 1956; M.D., 1961 Antony F. Michel. M.D., Faculte de Medecine (Haiti), 1955 Mona Milstein. B.A., State University of New York (Binghamton), 1965; M.D., State

University of New York (Buffalo), 1969 Irwin J. Polk. B.S., Rutgers, 1949; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1953 Farrokh Shahrivar. M.D., Tehran, 1966 Lucy H. Swift. B.A., Barnard, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Phienvit Tantibhedhyangkul. M.D., Mahido (Thailand), 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Ranjeet G. Virdi. M.B., B.S., Christian Medical (India), 1960 Elizabeth B. Watkins. B.A., Randolph-Macon, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Joseph A. Cannaliato,

M.D. Diane Hochlerin, M.D. Richard L. Mones, M.D. Edward A. Nichols, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued)

Shantha Subramaniam,

M.D. Thelma Verano-Santiago,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Ricarda Baum, M.D.

Morel Duverseau, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued)

Ruth E. Kessler, M.D. Rekha Kirtane, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Thomas H. Hyatt, Jr., M.D.

Pharmacology

David Hosack Professor and Chairman

Brian F. Hoffman. A. A., Princeton, 1943; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1947

Professors

J. Thomas Bigger, Jr. (also Medicine). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Kenneth E. Eakins (in Ophthalmology). Ph.D., London, 1962 Frederick G. Hofmann. B.A., Michigan, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1952 Harold C. Neu (also Medicine). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Anesthesiology). M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1944 Wilbur H. Sawyer (Gustavus and Louise Pfeiffer Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D., 1945; Ph.D., 1950

Adjunct Professors

Paul F. Cranefield. Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1946; Ph.D., Jurg Schneider. M.D., Basle (Switzerland), 1945

1951; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964

PHARMACOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY 101

Sidney Spector (also Anesthesiology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jeffer- son, 1956

Robert M. Weiss. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1960

Associate Professors

Norman Kahn (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1954; D.D.S., 1958;

Ph.D., 1964 Michael R. Rosen (also Pediatrics). B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1964 Hsueh-Hwa Wang. M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1946 Andrew L. Wit. B.S., Bates, 1963; Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Adjunct Associate Professors

Marvin R. Blumenthal. B.S., Michigan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949 Martin M. Winbury. B.S., Long Island, 1940, M.S., Maryland, 1942; Ph.D., New York University, 1954

Senior Research Associate

Lance L. Simpson. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., California, 1969

Assistant Professors

Peter Danilo, Jr. Ph.D., Columbia, 1974

Daniel J. Goldberg. Ph.D., Yale, 1974

Jaya Haldar. M.Sc, Calcutta, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1966

Douglas N. Ishii (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959

Lou Katz (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959

Richard B. Robinson. Ph.D., Illinois, 1975

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Edward B. Kirsten. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., New York University,

1966; Ph.D., City College, 1969 Lawrence Tilley. D.V.M., Iowa State, 1969

ASSOCIATE IN PHARMACOLOGY

Steven L. Roffman, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Samuel M. Ross, B.E.E. (Electrical Engineering)

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Gloria Semente, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Kenneth Dangman, Ph.D. Robert J. Hariman, M.D. Yat Hong Lau, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued)

Robert E. Naylor, M.D. Robert P. Reder, M.D. William J. Untereker,

M.D. Christine A. Walsh, M.D.

Physiology

John C. Dalton Professor and Chairman

John V. Taggart (also Medicine). M.D., Southern California, 1940

Professors

Shu Chien. M.B., National Taiwan, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957 Eric R. Kandel (also Psychiatry). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

102 PHYSIOLOGY PSYCHIATRY

Irving Kupferman (also Psychiatry). Ph.D., Chicago, 1964

William L. Nastuk. B.S., Rutgers, 1939; Ph.D., 1945

Mero Nocenti. B.A., West Virginia, 1951; M.S., 1952; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955

John P. Reuben (in Neurology). B.A., Crinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D.,

Florida, 1959 David Schachter. B.S., New York University, 1946; M.D., 1949

James H. Schwartz (also Neurology). B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York Universi- ty, 1959; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1964

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Medicine). M.B., Ch.B, Baghdad, 1962

Martin Blank. B.S., College oi the City of New York, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957;

Ph.D., Cambridge, 1959 Louis J. Cizek. B.S., Fordham, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941 Raimond Emmers. B.A., East Texas Baptist, 1953; M.A., North Carolina, 1955;

Ph.D., Syracuse, 1958 Michel Ferin (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Louvain, 1964 Jorge Fischbarg (in Ophthalmology); M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago,

1971 Claude P. J. Ghez (also Neurology). B. Sc, Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964

Senior Research Associate

Shunichi Usami. 1957

M.B., Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine (Japan), 1940; Ph.D.,

Assistant Professors

Kung-Ming Jan. M.B., National Taiwan, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 John D. Koester. B.A., Wooster (Ohio), 1965; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Hugh Nellans (in Medicine). B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971 Elizabeth B. Thompson (also Anatomy). B.A., Radcliffe, 1964; Ph.D., Cornell, 1971

Assistant Professor of Nursing

Ellen Batt. M.A., Columbia, 1959; Ph.D., 1967

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Richard E. Abbott, Ph.D. Jack T. Alexander, B.S. Ernest Amatniek Szloma Kowarski, M.A. Herbert H. Lipowsky, Ph.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Mary Chou Chen, M.S. Geert W. Schmid- Schonbein, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Craig H. Bailey, Ph.D. Robert G. King, B.Sc. Ludmiela Shkolnik, Ph.D. Lily M. Soo, Ph.D.

Psychiatry

Laurence Kolb Professor and Chairman

Edward J. Sachar. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1956

PSYCHIATRY 103

At New York State Psychiatric Institute

Professors

Jerome H. Jaffe. B.A., Temple, 1954; M.A., 1956; M.D., 1958

Eric R. Kandel (also Physiology). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University,

1956 Donald F. Klein. B.A., Colby, 1947; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Irving Kupferman (also Physiology). Ph.D., Chicago, 1964 Robert L. Spitzer. B.A., Cornell, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957 Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia,

1951

Professor of Biochemistry

Maurice M. Rapport. B.S., City College of New York, 1940; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1 946

Professors of Medical Psychology

Samuel Sutton. Ph.D., Chicago, 1955 William N. Thetford. Ph.D., Chicago, 1949

Professor of Neuropathology

Leon Roizin. B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1936

Professor of Social Sciences

Bruce Dohrenwend (also Public Health). B.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Cornell, 1955

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gene G. Abel. M.D., Iowa, 1965

H. Donald Dunton (in Pediatrics). M.D., Rochester, 1945

L. Erlenmeyer-Kimling. B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1960

Ronald R. Fieve. B.A., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1955

Archie R. Foley (in Public Health). B.A., Queens (Canada), 1943; M.D., CM., 1947;

M.S., Columbia, 1962 Lothar Gidro-Frank. M.D., Columbia, 1948

Murray Glusman. B.S., New York University, 1934; M.D., 1938 Joseph Jaffe. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., New York University, 1947 Aaron Karush. M.D., Boston, 1935

Donald S. Kornfeld. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1950; M.D., Yale, 1954 Sidney Malitz. B.S., Tulane, 1943; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1946 John D. Rainer (in Human Genetics). M.D., Columbia, 1951 James H. Ryan. B.A., Yale, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner (in Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

104 PSYCHIATRY

Clinical Professors

Willard Gaylin. B.A., Harvard, 1947; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1951

William Goldfarb (at Henry Ittleson Center for Child Psychiatry). B.A., Brooklyn

College, 1933; M.S., City College of New York, 1934; Ph.D., Columbia, 1940; M.D.,

Cornell, 1950 Roger MacKinnon. M.D., Columbia, 1950

Lionel Ovesey. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1937; M.D., 1941 Marvin E. Perkins. B.A., Albion, 1942; Harvard, 1946; M.P.H., Johns Hopkins,

1956 David Shaffer (also Pediatrics). M.D., London, 1961 Herbert Spiegel. B.S., Maryland, 1936; M.D., 1939 John Weber. B.A., Duke, 1939; M.D., Yale, 1943

Associate Professor of Dentistry

Austin H. Kutscher. B.A., New York University, 1945; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946

Associate Professor of Medical Psychology

Jacques Rutschmann. D. Sc, Geneva, 1956

Associate Professor of Neuropathology

Mavis Kaufman. M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Associate Professor of Public Health (Sociomedical Sciences)

Denise Kandel. Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurobiology and Behavior

Vincent F. Castellucci. B.A., Laval, 1960; B.Sc, 1964; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1968

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurochemistry

Hadassah Tamir. M.S., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1955; Ph.D., Israel Institute of Technolo- gy, 1959

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Liselotte Graf. M.D., Vienna, 1937

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Ruth Bennett. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

David L. Dunner. A. A., George Washington, 1960; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1965 Alexander H. Glassman. B.A., University of Illinois, 1956; M.D., 1958 Barry J. Gurland. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1955 Jerrold S. Maxmen. B.A., Wayne State, 1963; M.D., 1967 Frederic M. Quitkin. B.A., Princeton, 1958; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1962

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychology

W. Crawford Clark. Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Anke Ehrhardt. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1969

-PSYCHIATRY 105

Jean Endicott. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Rachel Gittelman-Klein. B.A., City College of New York, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychopharmacology

James M. Perel. Ph.D., New York University, 1964

Associate Clinical Professors

Paul A. Bradlow. M.D., Hahnemann, 1946

Richard G. Druss. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Richard A. Gardner. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956

Rodman Gilder, Jr. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Stanley Heller. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Herbert Hendin. M.D., New York University, 1949

Winslow R. Hunt. B.A., Chicago, 1946; M.A., 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Alexander N. Levay. M.D., Rochester, 1957

Robert S. Liebert. B.S., Syracuse, 1951; M.A., Clark, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Joseph Lubart. M.D., New York Medical College, 1943

Mary C. MacKay. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1959

Donald I. Meyers. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1946; M.D., Jefferson, 1950

Helen C. Meyers. B.A., Hunter, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949

John F. O'Connor. B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York, 1952

Ethel Person. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Seymour Post. M.D., New York University, 1947

Arthur Rifkin. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1961

Daniel Shapiro. M.D., Illinois, 1945

Leonard M. Sheehy. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., McGill, 1968

Ralph N. Wharton. M.D., Columbia, 1957

Associate Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Kenneth Frank. M.S., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., 1967

Kitty LaPerriere. M.S., Yale, 1953; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1962

Heino F.L. Meyer-Bahlburg. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1970

Associate Clinical Professors of Psychiatric Social Work

Bluma Swerdloff . D.S.W., Columbia, 1960 Winifred Winikus. M.S., Columbia, 1949

Assistant Professors of Biochemistry

George Alexander. B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953 Herbert L. Meltzer. B.S., Long Island, 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950

Assistant Professor of Medical Psychology

Thomas J. Carew. M.A., California (Riverside), 1967; Ph.D., 1970

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Miron Baron. M.D., Tel Aviv, 1972

Jerry Finkel. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

David V. Forrest. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

106 PSYCHIATRY

Laurence L. Greenhill. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967 Kenneth Greenspan. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963 Stanley S. Heller. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Shepard J. Kantor. B.A., Colby, 1965; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1969 Uriel Halbreich. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1961 Frederick Kass. B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 Julian Mendlewicz. M.D., Free University of Brussels, 1966; Ph.D., Columbia, 1973 Joaquim Puig-Antich. B.A., LaSalle Bonanova (Spain), 1960; M.D., Barcelona

(Spain), 1967 Lawrence Sharpe. D.P.M., London, 1961

Samuel G. Siris. B.A., Lehigh, 1966; M.S., 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Manuel Trujillo. B.S.C., Seville (Spain), 1962; M.D., 1966 Stuart C. Yudofsky. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Baylor, 1970 Philip Zeidenburg. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychology

Judith V. Becker. M.S., Eastern Washington State, 1968; Ph.D., Southern Mississippi, 1975

Miriam Cohen. B.A., Michigan, 1961; M.S., Pittsburgh, 1964; Ph.D., 1967

Donald J. Dillon. Ph.D. Fordham, 1955

Kenneth A. Frank. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Donald E. Hutchings (also Pediatrics). Ph.D., Columbia, 1965

Maureen Kanzler. B.A., Hunter, 1938; M.A., New York University, 1940; M.S., Hunter, 1959; Ph.D., Fordham, 1967

Dennis D. Kelly. Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

Dolores Kreisman. B.A., Barnard, 1953; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969

Cornelis Stokman. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Klaudiusz Weiss. M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony- brook), 1973

Assistant Professors of Clinical Social Sciences

Alexander Askenazy. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Muriel Hammer. Ph.D., Columbia, 1961

Carol X. Schwartz. B.S., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., Yale, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Nettie Terestman. M.S. W., Columbia, 1940; D.S. W., 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

Morton J. Aronson. B.A., Temple, 1944; M.D., 1947 Gregory Asnis. B.A., Dickinson, 1968; M.D., Hahnemann, 1972 Athanasia Balkoura. M.D., Athens, 1960

Amiram Barkai. M.Sc, Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1963; Ph.D., 1970 Leah Beck. M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1943 Christian C. Beels. B.A., Rochester, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1963 Anne E. Bernstein. B.A., Barnard, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 John P. Briggs. B.A., Indiana State, 1943; M.D., Wayne State, 1948 Paul F. Califano. B.A., Adelphi, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1954 Robert J. Campbell. M.D., Columbia, 1948 Max P. Cohen. M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Louise Coleman. M.D., Southern California, 1948

PSYCHIATRY 107

DeWitt L. Crandell. Zira De Fries. M.D., Tibor Farkas. M.D., Stephen K. Firestein. Eugene A. Friedberg. Myron R. Gershberg.

M.D., Arkansas, 1955 New York Medical College, 1942 Budapest, 1956 B.A., Columbia, 1947; M.D., 1951 M.D., Buffalo, 1958

B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.A., 1956; M.D., Buffalo, 1960 Richard J. Glavin. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Rochester, 1955 Robert Click. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Edwin Goldstein (in Pediatrics). B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958 Jerome D. Goodman. M.D., Pennsylvania, 1959 Gary J. Grad. B.A., Illinois, 1969; M.D., 1965 David Jaffe. M.D., Jefferson, 1950

Frank S. Jewett. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Peter Laderman. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., New York

Medical College; 1947 Frederick Lane. B.A., Cornell, 1949; M.D., Yale, 1953 Norman D. Lazar. M.D., Louisville, 1948 Burton Lerner. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957 Frederick Mendelsohn. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Stanford, 1958 Ruth Moulton. M.D., Chicago, 1939 Robert S. Mumford. M.D., McGill, 1943 Robert P. Parkin. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1950 David Peretz. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.A., Columbia, 1955;

M.D., New York University, 1959 Alvin Polatin. M.D., Columbia, 1948

M.D., New York University, 1950

B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., State University of New York

New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

Kathryn F. Prescott. Edward M. Shelley.

(Downstate), 1964 Charles Siegal. B.A.

(Downstate), 1958 Jerome Steiner. B.A., Chicago, 1949; M.A., 1951; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1962 Gloria M. Warner. M.D., New York, 1959 Martin Weiler. B.A., Syracuse, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Chicago Medical

School, 1954 Josef H. Weissberg. M.S., Albany Medical College, 1952 George H. Wilkie. M.D., Harvard, 1957 Daniel T. Williams. B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Cornell, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Irwin Mansdorf. M.A., Adelphi, 1973; Ph.D., 1976

Letty Munz. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., College of the City of New York, 1952; Ph.D., Columbia, 1974

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Syed Abdullah, M.D. Harry D. Albert, M.D. Michael S. Aronoff, M.D. John Atchley, M.D. Burton August, M.D. Stephen Bennett, M.D. Aurelio Buonanno, M.D. John Cedarquist, M.D. Harvey R. Chertoff, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued)

Stanley Coen, M.D. Richard S. Deucher, M.D. Leonard Diamond, M.D. Robert M. Elvolve, M.D. Gerald L Fogel, M.D. Bruce Forester, M.D. Eugene Forster, M.D. Sidney S. Furst, M.D. Lee R. Gardner, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued)

Louis J. Gilbert, M.D. Alvin J. Click, M.D. Ivan Goldberg, M.D. Sidney Goldensohn, M.D. Gurston Goldin, M.D. Charles Goodstein, M.D. Fiona Graham, M.D. Fred I. Hahn, M.D. Gregory Heimarck, M.D. Morton M. Hodas, M.D.

108 PSYCHIATRY

ASSOCIATES (continued) Carlos Ifarragueri, M.D. David Iverson, M.D. Daniel Justman, M.D. Lila J. Kalinich, M.D. Neil B. Kavey, M.D. Gabriel V. Laury, M.D. Leo Lefer, M.D. Naomi Leiter, M.D. Stephen J. Levitan, M.D. Stanley Lituchy, M.D. Virginia Lozzi, M.D. George W. Luhrmann,

M.D. Neil MacLean, M.D. Michael R. Milano, M.D. Ira L. Mintz, M.D. Leonard Moss, M.D. Philip R. Muskin, M.D. Louis Padovano, M.D. E. Rea Paidoussi, M.D. Waldo E. Pardo, M.D. Samuel W. Perry 111, M.D. M. Bruce Sarlin, M.D. Elias Savitsky, M.D. Arthur H. Schore, M.D. Irene B. Seeland, M.D. Robert S. Shapiro, M.D. Hannah Shields, M.A. Robert Silbert, M.D. Arthur Stein, M.D. Sanford W. Stein, M.D. Ann R. Turkel, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Samuel W. Anderson,

Ph.D. Estelle P. Bender, M.D. David P. Birkett, M.D.,

B.Ch. Richard L. Blumenthal,

Ph.D. Richard J. Bodnar, Ph.D. Melinda Broman, Ph.D. Judith Eckman, M.D. Richard S. Feldman, M.D. Anita K. Fischer, Ph.D. Maria Janena Hurwic,

M.D. Mitchell L. Kietzman,

M.D. Morton Levitt, Ph.D. Robert E. Patton, M.D. Dina D. Paul, M.D. Stephanie Portnoy, M.D. Kurt Salzinger, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

(continued)

Suzanne Salzinger, M.D. Nicholas Samios, M.D. David Wilder, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES IN BIOCHEMISTRY Sahebarao P. Mahadik,

Ph.D. A.S. Perumal, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY Peter Aldin, M.D. Donald G. Bell, M.D. Robinette N. Bell, M.D. Raymond Bernick, M.D. Charles H. Blackinton,

M.D. Stanley Bone, M.D. Abraham A. Bridger, M.D. Elizabeth A. Carter, M.D. William J. Chambers,

M.D. Leon Chattah, M.D. Francine Cournos, M.D. Gordon Dalton, M.D. Harry Diener, M.D. Olga Diz-Pi, M.D. Paul S. Ducker, M.D. Harold B. Esecover, M.D. Katherine Falk, M.D. James W. Flax, M.D. Wallace R. Forstell, M.D. {at Meyer-Manhattan Hospital) Peter F. Gaston, M.D. (at Meyer-Manhattan Hospital) Anastasios Georgotas,

M.D. lona H. Ginsburg, M.D. Maurice Golbey, M.D. Max Goldberg, M.D. Peter Gorham, M.D. Myra S. Hatterer, M.D. Joel S. Hoffman, M.D. Terry Wayne Hugg, M.D. Steven E. Hyler, M.D. Arthur R. Jacobs, M.D. Roberta Jaeger, M.D. James G. Katis, M.D. Richard A. Kresch, M.D. David Y. Levine, M.D. Michael R. Liebowitz, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Brian P. Lipton, M.D. John W. Lombardo, M.D. Erica M. Loutsch, M.D. Mark R. Mankoff, M.D. Eric R. Marcus, M.D. Josephine D. Martin, M.D. Peter C. Martindale, M.D. Susan Matorin, M.D. Bobba J. Moody, M.D. Swami R. Nathan, M.D. John D. O'Brien, M.D. David D. Olds, M.D. Linda F. Pessar, M.D. Michael Seth Quittman,

M.D. Henry A. Remet, M.D. Phyllis B. Robbins, M.D. Steven Paul Roose, M.D. Lyle E. Rosnick, M.D. Arnold Rothstein, M.D. Sheila Salama, M.D. Robert SantuUi, M.D. David P. Schiebel, M.D. Eleanor Schuker, M.D. Thomas E. Sedlock, M.D. Beth June Seelig, M.D. Morton D. Seigel, M.D. Lawrence Shaderowfsky,

M.D. Michael Shostak, M.D. Linda J. Skinner, M.D. Frieda H. Spady, M.D. Frank Stallone, M.D. Walter Tuchman, M.D. Alan J. Tuckman, M.D. Kenneth Wapnick, Ph.D. David J. Weiser, M.D. Richard W. Weiss, M.D. Lynn C. Winther, M.D. Thomas J. Yager, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Mary Bahadurian, M.D. Charles J. Barbanel, M.D. Bruce Y. Bleecker, M.D. Anstiss Bowser, M.D. Susan Braiman, M.D. Edward N. Brennan, M.D. Tonia Caldwell, M.D.

(Social Services) Charles Carluccio, M.D. Diana C. Cook, M.D. Conrad DeMaster, M.D. Aristide H. Esser, M.D.

PSYCHIATRY 109

ASSISTANTS (continued) Eda G. Goldstein, M.D. James W. Montgomery,

M.D. Doris M. Mortenson, M.D. William J. Nemon, M.D. Esther Ridder, M.D. Roberta Roth, M.D. Barbara C. Sacco, R.N. Marilyn Sande-Friedman,

M.D. Rishon Stember, M.D. Grace C.K. Sum, M.D. Walter J. Tardy, M.D. Abram Zevy, M.S.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Alfreda H. Howard, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Laura Lee Dean, B.A. Janos Marton, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Viola W. Bernard, M.D. John A. Cook, M.D. Katrina De Hirsch, B.A. Marjorie H. Frank

SPECIAL LECTURERS (continued) Olga Frankel, M.D. George Goldman, M.D. Soil Goodman, M.D. George A. Jervis, M.D. Henriette R. Klein, M.D. Lawrence C. Kolb, M.D. Bernard Pacella, M.D. Helen Schucman, M.D. Leo Srole, Ph.D. Alberta Szalita, M.D. Exie E. Welsch, M.D. Joseph Zubin, M.D.

LECTURERS

Kenneth Z. Altshuler,

M.D. Joseph E. Barmack, Ph.D. Jules R. Bemporad, M.D. Milton M. Berger, M.D. Victor Bernal, M.D. Henry Brill, M.D. Hugh F. Butts, M.D. Harry X. Cohen, M.D. Arnold M. Cooper, M.D. Barbara H. DeBetz, M.D. Lawrence Deutsch, M.D.

LECTURERS (continued)

Samuel L. Feder, M.D. Victor Goldin, M.D. Saul A. Grossman, Ph.D. Ernest M. Gruenberg,

M.D. Howard F. Hunt, Ph.D. Amnon Issacharoff, M.D. Hanna E. Kapit, Ph.D. Stuart L. Keill, M.D. Otto F. Kernberg, M.D. Alvin Mesnikoff, M.D. Robert Michels, M.D. George Mora, M.D. Francis J. O'Neill, M.D. Robert W. Rieber, M.D. Leon Salzman, M.D. Jay Schulman, M.D. Natalie Shainess, M.D. Joan H. Shapiro,

M.S.S.W. Alfonso Tornusciolo, B.M.,

B.Ch. Patricia A. Tueting, M.D. Milton Viederman, M.D. Martin S. Willick, M.D. Sheldon Zimberg, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Harvey Gurian. M.D., Toronto, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professor

Charles W. Lamb. Ph.D., Ohio State, 1966

Associates in Clinical Psychiatry

John E. Denny, Ph.D. Charles J. Hudson, M.D. Peter M. Johngren, M.D. Eugene J. Pilek, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Virginia N. Wilking. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Associate Clinical Professor

Margaret M. Lawrence. B.A., Cornell, 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1940

110 PSYCHIATRY

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Seymour Gers. B.S., Brooklyn College, 1952; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1956 Emery S. Hetrick. B.A., Ohio State, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1957 Austin Moore. B.S., Queens, 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959 Peter-Heinrich Schween. M.D., Hamburg, 1955

Assistant Clinical Professors

Irwin J. Averbach. B.S., Michigan, 1949; M.D., Buffalo, 1954 Gladys Egri. M.D., Madrid, 1955; M.S., Columbia, 1965 Raymond Raskin. B.A., New York University, 1942; M.D., 1946

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

PSYCHIATRY

Shale Brownstein, M.D.

Jeffrey S. Hammer, M.D.

Carol Leal, M.D.

Gideon Nachumi, M.D.

Raymond W. Ransom,

M.D. Pauline E. Thompson,

M.D. Susana L. Van Alstine,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY Sumanasiri Alahendra,

M.B.B.S. Michael H. Ford, M.B.B.S. Milton Lee, M.D. J. Trevor Lindo, M.D. Sideny M. Lytton, M.D. Joseph C. Napoli, M.D. Michael V. Osborn, M.D. Sady Sulton, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Carol Garmiza, Ph.D.

LECTURER

Bruce Ballard, M.D.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lloyd A. Hamilton, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Harvard, 1954

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY Martin V. Hart, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Clinical Professor

Harley C. Shands. B.S., Tulane, 1936; M.D., 1939

Associate Clinical Professor

Gary Lee Lefer. B.S., Stanford, 1962; M.D., Georgetown, 1966

Assistant Clinical Professors

Noble A. Endicott. B.A., Texas, 1951; M.D., 1955

Richard G. Kopff. B.A., Cornell, 1956; M.D., 1960

Harry R. Potter. B.S., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Stephen P. Reibel. B.A., Harvard, 1957; M.D., 1961

George Satran. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

Robert D. Scharf. B.S., Union, 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1970

Richard C. Wallace. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1965

PSYCHIATRY 111

Assistant Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

James D. Meltzer. B.A., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., New York University/, 1973 Arthur Weider. Ph.D., New York University, 1946

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

William H. Brownlee,

M.D. Aaron Esman, M.D. Blanche Glass, Ph.D. Justin L. Greene, M.D. Sonia W. Hyman, M.D. Jeffrey Kramer, M.D. Martin I. Lubin, M.D. Arthur M. Perlman, M.D. Barbara R. Rosenfeld,

M.D. Mitchell S. Rosenthal,

M.D. Diane L. Stone, M.D. William M. Tucker, M.D. William D. Wheat, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Alma Levinson, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Allen J. Burstein, M.D. Arlene C. Caldwell, M.D. Martin D. Doft, M.D. Ellen G. Glass, M.D. Stephen C. Glassberg,

M.D. Allan D. Gordon, M.D. Charles G. Jackson, Jr.,

M.D. David K. Jordan, M.D. Robert J. Kent, M.D. Edward W. Kloth, M.D. Woon Soon Lee, M.D. Ernesto Lozano, M.D. James M. McGowan James L. Maher, M.D. Donald J. Mayerson, M.D. Jeffry R. Nurenberg, M.D. Arthur S. Piatt, D.O. Henry A. Remet, M.D. Zach Schaye, M.D. Roy Shapiro, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Jane Simon, M.D. Barry L. Singer, M.D. Julia E. Taub, M.D. Melvin L. Thrash, M.D. Maria L.C. Velez, M.D. Haze! Weinberg, M.D. David S. Weinberger,

M.D. Marie Weinberger, M.D. Rev. Barry G. Wood

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Herbert Bilick, M.D. James D. Meltzer, Ph.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

John Davis, M.D. Robert L. Meineker, M.D. Andrzej Nidonorow, M.D. Nestor J. Totero, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER Lilli C. Shalsa, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Clarice J. Kestenbaum. B.A., California (Los Angeles). 1950; M.D., 1960 Henry I. Spitz. B.A., Lafayette, 1961; M.D., New York Medical College, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychology

Harry R. Kissilef. Ph.D., Pennsylvania, 1966 Adam Munz. Ph.D., New York University. 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Gail B. Allen. B.A. Frederic A. Ailing. Alex Caemmerer, Ji Irene Chiarandini.

, Wellesley, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1961

B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947 M.D., Buenos Aires. 1963

Ralph Colp, Jr. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1948

Samuel C. Klagsbrun. B.R.E., Jewish Theological Seminary, 1954; B.A., College of

the City of New York, 1955; M.D., Chicago, 1962 David M. MacDonald. B.S., Oregon, 1945; M.D., Tufts, 1949 Eugene Mahon. M.D., National (Ireland), 1964

John A. Milici. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Geneva (Switzerland), 1957 John W. Rosenberger. B.A., Dartmouth, 1956; M.D. CM., McCill, 1960 Harvey L. White. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., New York Medical College, 1964

112 PSYCHIATRY PUBLIC HEALTH

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

PSYCHIATRY

Harold H. Fogelman, M.D.

Harry Reiss, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Keaneth Berc, M.D. Victor D'Arc, M.D. Nathaniel Donson, M.D. Robert E. Hall, M.D. Charles L. Ihlenfeld, M.D. Willard S. Kahn, M.D. Daniel Koblentz, M.D. Leo Kron, M.D. Howard E. Millman, M.D. Paul W. Nassar, M.D. Henry A. Paul, M.D. Michael A. Pawel, M.D. Michael C. Piercey, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Kenneth Porter, M.D. Corey Nyles Rigberg,

M.D. Sirgay Sanger, M.D. Bernardo S. Scheimber^,

M.D. Ira B. Silverstein, M.D. William G. Sommer, M.D. Henry I. Spitz, M.D. Gerda H. Strika, M.D. Martha C. Troutman,

M.D. Joel Wallack, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Cyros Aromlooi, M.D. Carlos Diaz-Matos, M.D. Stephen R. Dunlop, M.D.

ASSISTANTS {continued)

Hanne E. Favelukes, M.D. Gregory Fischer, M.D. John A. Fogelman, M.D. Edward E. Gilmour, M.D. Joel Gonchar, M.D. Alan Kouzmanoff, M.D. Henry C. Mallard, M.D. Reed C. E. Moskowitz,

M.D. Keith Sedlacek, M.D. Daviod Z. Starr, M.D. Victor Syrmis, M.D. Michael Trapido, M.D. Stephen G. Underwood,

M.D. Charles F. Yackulic, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER John Cotton, M.D.

Public Health

Associate Professor and Acting Chairman

Bernard D. Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961; M.P.H., Harvard, 1963

Biostatistics

Professors

John W. Fertig. B.A., Ursinus, 1931; Ph.D., Minnesota, 1933 Joseph L. Fleiss. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.S., 1961; Ph.D., 1967

Adjunct Professor

Carl H. Erhardt. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1941; M.P.A., New York University, 1957; M.S., Harvard, 1958; D.Sc, 1962

Associate Professors

Agnes P. Berger. Ph.D., Budapest, 1939; M.A., Columbia, 1944

Allen S. Ginsberg (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.M.E., Cornell, 1958; M.I.E., 1959; Ph.D., Stanford, 1970

Senior Research Associate

Neal W. Chilton. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; D.D.S., New York University, 1943; M.P.H., Columbia, 1946

Assistant Professors

Robert R. Golden. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1960; M.S. Oregon State, 1963; Ph.D., Minnesota, 1976

PUBLIC HEALTH 113

Bruce Levin (Mathematical Statistics). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.A., Havard, 1972;

Ph.D., 1974 Patrick E. Shrout (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A.. St. Louis, 1972; Ph.D., Chicago,

1976

Sylvan Wallenstein. B.S., City College, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Sol Blumenthal. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.B.A., New York University, 1958; Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1969

Joseph Breuer. M.D., Vienna, 1937; M.P.H., Columbia, 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D., 1969

Turkan K. Gardenier. B.A., Vassar, 1961; M.A., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., 1966

Donald C. Ross. B.A., Rochester, 1955; M.A., North Carolina, 1957; Ph.D., 1960

INSTRUCTORS RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Carol A. Bodian, M.S. Jennie K. Kline, Ph.D. (in the Sergievsky

Frieda Nelson, B.A. Center)

Martin Schnall, M.S. Molly Park, M.A.

Alex Tytun, M.S. Robert A. Strauss, M.D.

Livia R. Turgeon, M.S.

Environmental Health Sciences

Professor

I. Bernard Weinstein (also Medicine) (in the Cancer Center). B.S., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., 1955

Associate Professor

Dezider Grunberger (also Biochemistry) (in the Institute of Cancer Research). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; Sc.D., 1968

Senior Research Associate

Granville H. Sewell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; Ph.D., 1966

Assistant Professors

Paul N. Borsky. B.A., Brooklyn College, 1942

Alan M. Jeffrey. B.S., Hull (UK), 1966; Ph.D., University College of North Wales (UK), 1970

ASSOCIATE

Michael Gochfeld, M.D.

Epidemiology

Professors

Bruce P. Dohrenwend (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.A., 1951; Ph.D.,

Cornell, 1955 Zena A. Stein (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Cape Town, 1941; M.A., 1942; M.B.,

B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950

114 PUBLIC HEALTH

Mervyn W. Susser (Director, Sergievsky Center). M.B., B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner. B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Adjunct Professor

Wolf Szmuness. M.D., Kharkov Medical Institute (USSR), 1955; D.Med. Sc, Academy of Medicine (Lublin, Poland), 1964

Associate Professors

Mary G. McCrea Curnen. M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1948; D.T.M. Antwerp (Belgium),

1949; Dr. P.H., Columbia, 1972 Frances R. Gearing. B.S., Vermont, 1936; M.D., 1940; M.P.H., Columbia, 1957 Holger H. Hansen (in the Sergievsky Center). M.D., Freie Universitat (German

Federal Republic), 1961; M.P.H., Columbia, 1967; Dr. P.H., 1973 David Rush (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Elmer F. Struening. B.S., Hastings, 1949; M.S., Purdue, 1951; Ph.D., 1957

Senior Research Associates

Lillian M. Belmont. B.A., Brooklyn, 1947; M.A., College of the City of New York, 1949; Ph.D., New York University, 1957; M.S., Columbia, 1970

Inge F. Goldstein. B.A., Wellesley, 1951; M.S., Pittsburgh, 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1968

Assistant Professors

Ora S. Fagan. B.A., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1961; M.S.W., California (Berkeley), 1965;

D.S.W., 1973 Anna C. Gelman. B.A., Hunter, 1932; M.P.H., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1934 Nigel S. Paneth (also Pediatrics) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968;

M.D., Harvard, 1972; M.P.H., Columbia, 1978 Stephen Shafer (also Neurology) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966;

M.D., Columbia, 1970; M.P.H., 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Patricia R. Cohen. B.A., Hamline, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1968

Ann B. Goodman. B.A., Radcliffe, 1953; M.A., George Washington, 1963; M.S.,

Columbia, 1972 Paul S. May. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1951; M.S., Syracuse, 1952;

D.Sc, Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1955; M.P.H., Columbia, 1970

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATE

Thomas G. Lamb, Ph.D. Clifford A. York, M.A.

Thomas A. Wills, Ph.D.

PUBLIC HEALTH 115

Health Administration

Professors

John H. Bryant (Delamar Professor) (Public Health Practice). B.A., Arizona, 1949;

M.D., Columbia, 1953 Lowell E. Bellin. B.S., Yale, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1951; M.P.H., Harvard, 1964 Lucie S. Kelly (also Nursing). B.S.N., Pittsburgh, 1947; M.Litt., 1957; Ph.D., 1965 Nora Piore (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Wisconsin, 1933;

M.A., 1934 Frank W. van Dyke (Administrative Medicine). B.A., Union (Schenectady), 1939;

M.S., Columbia, 1954 Samuel Wolfe. M.D., Toronto, 1950; M.P.H., Columbia, 1960; Dr.P.H., 1961

Adjunct Professors

Arne C. V. Barkhuus (Public Health Practice). B.A., Copenhagen, 1926; M.D., 1933;

D.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1938 Robert H. Hamlin. B.A., Ohio State. 1944; B.S.M., 1944; B.M., 1946; M.D.,

Northwestern, 1947; M.P.H., Harvard, 1952; LL.B., 1953 Joseph V. Terenzio. B.A., Yale, 1939; J.D., Fordham, 1947; M.S.. Columbia, 1954

Associate Professors

Elinor F. Downs (Public Health Practice). B.A., Smith, 1933; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1937; M.P.H., Columbia, 1952; Cambridge, 1968 Bruce Vladeck (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Harvard, 1970;

M.A., Michigan, 1972; Ph.D., 1973

Adjunct Associate Professors

Morton A. Fisher. B.A., Western Reserve, 1942; D.D.S.. 1944; M.P.H., Columbia,

1957; B.A., Brooklyn, 1958 Harold Fruchtbaum (History and Philosophy of Public Health). B.C.E., New York

University, 1955; M.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1956; Ph.D., Harvard,

1964; M.A., Cambridge, 1968 Lloyd F. Novick (also Pediatrics). B.A., Colgate, 1961; M.D., New York University,

1965; M. P. H, Yale 1971 Eugene D. Rosenfeld (Administrative Medicine). B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.D., 1943 Irving S. Shapiro (Public Health Education). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1938; M.S., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1954

Senior Research Associate

Regina Loewenstein (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Barnard, 1936; M.A., Columbia, 1937

Assistant Professors

Noreen M. Clark. B.S., Utah. 1965; M.A., Columbia, 1972; Ph.D.. 1976

Melanie C. Dreher. B.S., Long Island. 1967; Ph.D.. Columbia, 1977

Brant E. Fries (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Columbia. 1967;

Ph.D., Cornell. 1972 Fred Goldman. B.A., Queens, 1967; M.A., Brown, 1970; Ph.D., City College, 1975

116 PUBLIC HEALTH

Harriet S. Goldman (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., New York University, 1962;

D.D.S., 1965; M. P.M., Columbia, 1966 W. David Latham. B.S., Stanford, 1966; M.B.A., 1968 Marcia L. Pinkett-Heller. B.A., Howard, 1963; M.P.H., Michigan, 1970 Stephen N. Rosenberg. B.A., Cornell, 1963; M.D.. Albert Einstein, 1967; M.P.H.,

Harvard, 1969 Paul L. Selbst. B.S., Bufalo, 1957; M.S., Columbia, 1961 Michael L. Ziegler. B.A., State University of New York (Albany), 1972; J.D., State

University of New York (Buffalo), 1976

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Raymond S. Alexander. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.B.A., 1954; M.S., Columbia,

1956 Austin Corinaldi (at Harlem Hospital). B.A., New York, 1949; M.P.H., Columbia,

1964; M.S., 1969 Samuel Davis (Administrative Medicine). B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952;

M.S., Columbia, 1957 Jack J. Goldman (Public Health Practice). B.S., Vermont, 1946; M.D., 1950; M.P.H.,

Johns Hopkins, 1 953 William H. Hermann. B.S., Missouri, 1951; M.S., Yale, 1953 Henry R. Karpe. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.S., Wisconsin,

1972 Nicetas H. Kuo (Public Health Practice). M.D., Philippines, 1941; M.P.H., Columbia,

1953 Francis C. Lindaman. B.A., Gettysburg, 1935; M.A., 1936 William L. Nute, Jr. B.A., Swarthmore, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943 Percival B. Phillips (Public Health Practice). B.A., San Francisco State, 1954; M.A.,

1956; Ed.D., Columbia, 1965 Arnold E. Rosenblum. B.A., Brooklyn, 1947; J.D., New York University, 1950; M.S.,

Columbia, 1964 Eleanore Rothenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; M.P.A., New York University, 1969;

Ph.D., 1975 Esther A. Schisa (Public Health Practice). B.S., Syracuse, 1947; M.A., Columbia,

1955 Sheila M. Smythe. B.S., Creighton, 1952; M.S., Columbia, 1956 Boris A. Vanadzin. M.D., Munich, 1955; M.P.H., California (Berkeley), 1959

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Sheila Gorman, M.P.H. Everett D. Hines, M.S.

INSTRUCTORS

Peggy Ann Alsup, M.D. Stephen Banks, M.A. Arthur R. Caplan (History

and Philosophy of Public

Health) Barbara S. Cooper, M.D. Catherine D. Crone, M.D. Michael Goldfarb, M.S.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Margaret L. Haynes,

M.P.H. Steven Karten, M.B.A. Dulcy B. Miller, M.S. David Moxley, M.B.A. Thomas A. Sherwood,

M.P.H. Isabel Sklar, M.P.H. Virginia K. Stowe, M.S. Paul M. Thompson, M.

Phil.

ASSOCIATES

Emil F. Pascarelli, M.D. (Administrative Medicine) Constance C. Rogers,

M.D. (at Harlem

Hospital)

STAFF ASSOCIATES Robert W. Rosenblum,

M.P.A. Hila Shererdson, M.A.

Population and Family Health

Professor

Allan G. Rosenfield (also Obstetrics and Gynecology) (Director, Center for Population and Family Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

PUBLIC HEALTH 117

Associate Professors

Nicholas Cunningham (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1955; Dr. P.H., 1976 Susan G. Philliber. B.A., Florida State, 1965; M.S., 1966; Ph.D., 1968 John A. Ross (in IISHR). B.A., Ottawa, 1956; M.A., Yale, 1957; Ph.D., 1961

Adjunct Associate Professors

John Bongaarts. M.S., Eindhoven Institute of Technology, 1968; Ph.D., Illinois, 1972 Thomas Frejka. Engineer, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1966

Senior Research Associate

Walter B. Watson. B.A., Southern Methodist, 1953; M.S., Wisconsin, 1954; Ph.D., 1959

Assistant Professors

Christina Brinkley-Carter. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.A. Temple, 1968; Ph.D.,

Princeton, 1977 Martin E. Gorosh. B.A., Brooklyn, 1959; M.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1969; Dr.P.H,

1973 Stephen L. Isaacs. B.A., Brown, 1961; J.D., Columbia, 1965 Pearilla Rothenberg. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1970; M.Phil., Columbia, 1974; Ph.D.,

1976 Krishna Roy. B.A., Bombay, 1948; M.A., 1950; Ph.D., 1954 Alan M. Sear. B.S., Tennessee, 1965; M.A., 1967; Ph.D., Purdue, 1971 William A. Van Wie. B.A., College of Wooster, 1961; B.D., Pittsburgh Seminary,

1964; M.P.H., North Carolina, 1968; Dr. P.H., 1974

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Joy G. Dryfoos. B.A., Antioch, 1951; M.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1966

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTORS

Henry G. Elkins, Jr., Ph.D. Marjorie A. Costa, M.P.H.

Amy F. Galen, M.A.

Sociomedical Sciences

Professors

Barbara Dohrenwend. B.A., Wellesley, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1948; Ph.D., 1954 Jack Elinson. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., George Washington 1946; Ph.D., 1954

Associate Professor

John L. Colombotos. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.A., 1952; Ph.D., Michigan, 1961

Adjunct Associate Professor of Public Health

Denise B. Kandel (in Psychiatry). B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.A., Columbia, 1953; Ph.D., 1960

118 PUBLIC HEALTH

Senior Research Associates

Ann F. Brunswick. B.A, Hunter, 1946; M.A., Clark, 1947

Stanley Budner. B.A., City College of New York, 1955; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960 Paul W. Haberman. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1948; M.B.A., New York University, 1961 Eric Josephson. B.A., New York University, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1949; Ph.D., 1959

Assistant Professor

Sally Guttmacher. B.S., Wisconsin, 1963

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Margery M. Braren. B.A., Barnard, 1961; M.A., Columbia, 1963; Ph.D., 1971 Mitchell Schorow (Medical Education). B.A., Roosevelt, 1950; M.A., Northwestern, 1961; Ph.D., Utah, 1971

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES RESEARCH ASSOCIATES [continued) SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Kenneth Andrews, Ph.D. Morton R. Siegal, M.A. (at John M. Boyle, M. Phil.

Stanley Fisher, M.S. Harlem Hospital) Lambros Comitas, Ph.D.

Robert W. Jones, M.A. Athilia E. Siegmann, M.S.

Corinne Kirchner, M.Phil. Anne S. Zanes, Ph.D.

Tropical Medicine

Professors

Michael Katz (also Pediatrics). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963 Roger W. Williams (Medical Entomology). B.S., Illinois, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D.,

Columbia, 1947

Associate Professors

Philip A. D'Alesandro (Parasitology). B.S., Rutgers, 1952; M.S., 1954; Ph.D., Chica- go, 1958

Dickson D. Despommier (Parasitology). B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., Colum- bia, 1964; Ph.D., Notre Dame, 1967

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ashton C. Cuckler (Parasitology). B.A., Nebraska, 1935; M.A., 1936; Ph.D., Minneso- ta, 1941 John D. Frame. B.A, Wheaton, 1938; M.D., Northwestern, 1943

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Roland P. Brown. B.A., Bethel, 1947; M.D., Chicago, 1951

Iwan D. Guicherit. M.D, Coverment Medical School (Surinam), 1942; M.P.H., Colum- bia, 1948; M.D., Amsterdam, 1952

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTORS

Suzanne Holmes, Ph.D., (Parasitology) Martin G. Blechman, M.D.

Chung C. Wang, M.D.

PUBLIC HEALTH 119

Faculty Members Not Affiliated with Specific Divisions

Professor

Sami A. Hashim (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Beirut, 1950; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Adjunct Professor

Myron Brin (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Cornell, 1947; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1951

Adjunct Associate Professor

Susanne Bennett-Clark (Public Health Nutrition) (at St. Luke's Hospital). B.Sc, Melbourne, 1958; Ph.D., Western Australia, 1963

Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatrics

Shirley A. Mayer. B.A., Hunter College, 1940; M.D., Chicago, 1943

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

Jane Bertrand, Ph.D.

Lecturers in All Divisions

Kenneth F. Adamec, M.S. George H. Adams, M.S. Frederick D. Alley, M.D. Robin F. Badgley, Ph.D. Peter Baglio, Sc.M. Gary B. Beringer, D.P.H. Richard A. Berman,

M.B.A., M.H.A. Joseph Loring Bloch, M.A Roy Brown, M.A. Martin Cherkasky, M.D. Irene J. Clark, M.P.H. Alvin J. Conway, M.S. Jean B. Cropper, M.P.H. Anita S. Curran, M.D. Frank DeScipio, M.S. Daniel L. Drosness,

M.P.H. Gary M. Eidsvold, M.D. Raymond Fink, M.D. Thomas J. Foley, M.S. Stephen L. Forstenser,

M.S. Richard C. Friedman,

M.D. Bernard Fuss, M.S. Robert Galton, Ph.D.

Gary Gambuti George Goldberg, M.B.A. Janet Gottschalk, Dr.P.H. Edward V. Grant Margaret T. Grossi, M.D. David Harris, M.D. Robert E. Heinlein, M.S. Donald W. Helbig, M.D. E. Geoffrey High, M.S. Frank E. laquinta, M.D. Florence Kavaler, M.D. Howard R. Kelman,

Ph.D. Richard N. Kerst, B.A. Schuyler G. Kohl, M.D. John T. Kolody, M.S. Jacob Levine

Mary C. McLaughlin, M.D. Robert Markowitz, M.S. Robert M. Morrison,

M.H.A. Anthony C. Mustalish,

M.D. Karl E. Nelson, M.S. Margaret J. O'Brien,

M.P.H. Donna O'Hare, M.D.

Jean Pakter, M.D.

Clarence E. Pearson, M.S. Richard H. Perry, M.S. Olive E. Pitkin, M.D. David A. Reed, M.S. Peter Rogatz, M.D. Alan H. Rosenblut, M.B.A. Hana Rostain, M.D. Maurice V. Russell, Ed.D. Harvey Schoenfeld, M.S. Melvin S. Schwartz, M.D. Sam Shapiro, B.S. Joseph Sherber, M.S. Elliot J. Simon, M.S. Joseph E. Snyder, M.D. Richard A. Stolnacke,

M.S. Thomas J. G. Tighe, Jr.,

M.P.H. Andre A. O. Varma, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Beatrice Mintz, M.D. Samuel M. Wishik, M.D.

120 RADIOLOGY

Radiology

Professor and Chairman

William B. Seaman. M.D., Harvard, 1941

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

David H. Baker. M.D., Boston, 1951

Walter E. Berdon. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., 1955

Chu Huai Chang. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai), 1944

Kent Ellis. M.D., Yale, 1950

Eric Hall (Physics). Ph.D., Iriel (Oxford), 1962

Sadek Hilal. M.D., Cairo, 1955

Philip M. Johnson. B.A., Dartmouth, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Harald H. Rossi (Physics). Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942

Professors of Clinical Radiology

William J. Casarella. B.A., Yale, 1959; M.D. Harvard, 1963 Frieda Feldman. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., 1957 Donald L. King. B.A., Stanford, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Ralph Schlaeger. B.S., Wisconsin, 1942; M.D., 1945

Adjunct Professors

Victor P. Bond. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1943; M.D., California (San Francisco),

1945; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1952 Simon Larach. Ph.D., Princeton, 1955 Thomas P. Vogl (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.S., Pittsburgh,

1957; Ph.D., Carnegie-Mellon, 1969

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borek. B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weizman Institute (Israel), 1967

Associate Professors of Clinical Radiology

Thane Asch. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

John H. Austin. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Yale, 1965

Rashid Fawwaz. M.D., American (Beirut), 1960; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1968

Patricia Tretter. B.A., Marquette, 1944; M.D., 1949

Adjunct Associate Professor

Lawrence A. Shepp. B.S., Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, 1958; M.A., Princeton, 1960; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Kevin L. Macken. M.D., National (Ireland), 1947 Eric C. Martin. M.D., St. Thomas (London), 1967 Paul Sane. M.D., Bucharest, 1950

RADIOLOGY 121

Assistant Professor

Charles R. Geard. Ph.D., Australian National University, 1973 Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

George F. Ascherl. B.A., Queens, 1966; M.D., St. Louis, 1970

Peter D. Esser (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Brown, 1961; M.S., Adelphi, 1964;

Ph.D., 1971 David A. FoUett. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1964

Sundara R. Ganti. M.B.B.S., Guntur Medical College (India), 1967; M.D., 1967 Richard P. Gold. B.A., Tufts, 1965; M.D., 1969 Leoniadas Harisiadis. M.D., National (Athens), 1966

Peter Joseph (Radiation Biophysics). B.S., Lafayette, 1959; Ph.D., Harvard, 1961 Patricia Kaim. B.S., Western Kentucky, 1955; M.D., Louisiana, 1966 Nikitis D. Kessaris (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Emory, 1952; M.S., Harvard, 1953;

Ph.D., 1966 Duk II Sung. B.A., Kyungbuk National (Korea), 1964; M.D., 1968 Theodore Sheng-Tao Wang. Ph.D., Maryland, 1964 Margaret A. Whelon. B.S., St. John's, 1968; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1972 Ellen L. Wolf. B.A., Connecticut College, 1968; M.D., Mount Sinai, 1972

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Bruce J. Biavati (Radiation Biophysics). 1964

B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.A., 1955; Ph.D.,

Assistant Clinical Professors

Shelby J. Galloway. B.A., Catawba College, 1961: M.D., Bowman-Gray, 1965 William M. Griffin. B.S., Notre Dame, 1958; M.D., State University of

York (Upstate), 1962 Harvey L. Hecht. B.A., Amherst, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Steven D. Richman. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971 Louis Rottenberg. B.S., Boston, 1936; M.D., 1940 Robert Silbey. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

New

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Marion H. Biavati, Ph.D. Richard P. Bird, Ph.D.. Michael L. Freeman, B.S. Leon J. Goodman, Ph.D.

(Radiation Biophysics) Frederick Kelcz, Ph.D.

(Radiation Biophysics) Paul J. Kliauga, Ph.D.

(Radiation Biophysics) Richard Miller Tirunelveli Subramanian,

M.B.B.S. Peter M.S. Wai

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Sharon M. Kreps Louis E. Rambler, M.D. Jyott Shah, M.D. Alan J. Silver, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Rudolph Gand Herbert Jacobs, B.E.E. Laurie Roizin-Towle, M.S. Thomas C. Yang, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY

Harry Agress, Jr., M.D. Gregory M. Carsen, M.D. Norman G. Diamond, M.D. David V. Habif, Jr., M.D.

122 RADIOLOGY

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Harry Rodney Hartman.

Otto D. Sahler. M.S., Rochester, 1936; M.D., 1938

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

RADIOLOGY

Robert D. Henretig, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Theodore R. Stent. B.A., Talladega, 1944; M.D., Meharry, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Jeanne Armstrong. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Christopher A. Johnson. B.A., Howard, 1943; M.D., 1947

Laurencia B. Regalado. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1957

Headley Scott. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1941; M.D., Howard, 1944

Assistant Clinical Professors

Yuthana Samroengraja. M.D., Chulalongkorn Hospital Medical School, 1965 Abdulhamid R. Vazir. M.D., University of Bombay, 1942

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY Chomyong K. Charoenkul, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Albert A. Dunn. M.D., Cornell, 1943

Assistant Professor of Clinical Radiology

Alvaro Vallejo. M.D., Del Valle (Columbia), 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

David S. Marsden. Ph.D., Jefferson, 1968 George Stassa. B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., 1960 Harold L. Stitt. B.A., Colorado, 1953; M.D., 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Andre Abitbol, M.D. Sabino J. Rizzo, M.D.

Cynthia Lee David, M.D. Kenneth T. Rogers

Carmel N. Donovan, M.D. Theodora Serban, M.D.

Pierre-Alix Haspil, M.D. Peter K. Yeung, M.D. Cynthia Lehr, M.D. Hi-Jung Pyun, M.D.

RADIOLOGY REHABILITATION MEDICINE 123

At St. Luke's Hospital

Professors of Clinical Radiology

Nathaniel Finby. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1938; M.D., 1942

Richard D. Kittridge. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954

Clinical Professors

Kuo-York Chynn. B.S., National Tung-Chi (Shanghai), 1945; M.D., 1949; M.S., St.

Louis, 1954 Virginia Kanick. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

John T. Hsu. M.D., National Defense (Taiwan), 1957

Leonard M. Liegner. B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 -

Efthimios C. Spyropoulos. M.D., Athens, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Jeanne W. Baer. B.S., Connecticut, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964 Carol L. Hilfer. B.A., Barnard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971 William I. Shaw. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1962

Assistant Clinical Professors

Ina A. Altman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1956; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylva- nia, 1960 Frank M. Dain. B.A. Dartmouth, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1945

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY INSTRUCTORS {continued) STAFF ASSOCIATE

Manoochehr Abiri, M.D. Allan B. Rubin, M.D. Morris Hodara, M.S.

Robert A. Phillips, M.D. Susan M. Tuck, M.D.

Rehabilitation Medicine

Simon Baruch Professor and Chairman

John A. Downey. M.D., Manitoba, 1954; D.Phil., Christ Church (Oxford), 1962; F.R.C.P.

At Presbyterian Hospital

Associate Professor

Lucien J. Cote (also Neurology). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954

Associate Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Erwin G. Gonzalez. B.A., Santo Tomas (Manila), 1962; M.D., 1967 Stanley J. Myers. B.A., New York University, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961

124 REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Assistant Professor

Larry J. Crawshaw (also Pathology). B.A., California, 1964

Assistant Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Caroline O. McCagg. B.A., Barnard, 1962; M.D., Yale, 1966

Naomi L. Turner. B.A., San Francisco Xavier (Bolivia), 1948; M.D., 1956

Assistant Clinical Professors

Antonio Cocchiarella. M.D., Bari (Italy), 1953

Francis J. Foca. B.S., Fordham, 1957; M.D., Bologna (Italy), 1966 Damyanti G. Moorjani (also Pediatrics). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant (Bombay), 1957

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Jonathan R. Moldover Robert Stone, M.S. (at Blythedale Children's Hospital)

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Alfred Hess, D.O. Vivenne Katz, M.A. Margarita C. Klug Anthony V. Porcelli

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Kathleen Watson-Walters, M.D. (at Blythedale Children's Hospital)

STAFF ASSOCIATES Abigail R. Evans, B.A. Daniel E. Lemons, M.S.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Albert D. Anderson (A. David Gurewitch Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1948, M.D., Harvard, 1952

Associate Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Herbert L. Thornhill. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1951; M.D., Howard, 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Yasoma B. Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1963

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning (in Pediatrics). B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1949

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Wanda Brokdzka, M.A. Cecilia Macauley, M.A.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION

MEDICINE

Joseph Malloy, M.A.

Louise Weiss, M.A.

REHABILITATION MEDICINE 125

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Rodolfo L. Reyes. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Arun K. Bhattacharyya, M.D., M.S. Salley Wisely, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Shy h- Jong Yue. M.D., National College of Medicine (Shanghai), 1938

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lucille T. Pai. M.D., Woman's Christian Medical College (Shanghai), 1941

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Ravi Raj Malpe, M.B., B.S.

Occupational Therapy

Professor

Marie Louise Franciscus (director of program). O.T.R., Philadelphia School of Occu- pational Therapy, 1937; B.S., Ohio State, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1956

Assistant Professor

Barbara Neuhaus. B.A., Keuka, 1950; M.A., Columbia, 1960

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Margaret F. Brown, B.S. Adeie Germain, M.S. Nedra P. Gillette, B.S., M.S. Diane Shapiro, M.A. Eleanor V. Shelly, B.S. Gordon G. Williamson, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Cheryl Colangelo, B.S. Sandra Countee, M.S. Alice Feinberg, M.S. Laura B. Hoffman Margarita C. Klug, B.S. Carol H. Shaw, M.A. Lorna J. Spearman Alice R. Trie, B.S.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Elaine Bertles, B.S. Laurelee Hawkins Wendy R. Levine, B.S. Sheryl Westcott

Physical Therapy

Professor

Mary E. Callahan (director of program). R.N., Clinton Hospital, 1937; R.P.T., Posse College, 1940; B.S., New York University, 1950; M.A., Columbia, 1955

126 REHABILITATION MEDICINE SURGERY

Associate Professors

Ruth Dickinson (associate director of program). B.S., Russell Sage, 1944; M.A.,

Columbia, 1947 Althea M. Jones. B.S., Panzer College of Physical Education, 1944; M.A., Columbia,

1972

Assistant Professor

Bernadette Hecox. B.S., Columbia, 1968; M.A., 1973

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY Theodore Corbitt, M.A.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Margaret Beyda, B.S. Marion Marx, M.A. B.S.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Georgia Nesbit Reidel, B.S. Diane Zuck, B.A.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Joan Belding, B.S. Jewel Derin, B.S.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

Lida Derzookian, B.S. Ann B. Edgar, B.S. Pamela Harris James Kruse, M.S. Joan Smith, B.S.

Surgery

Valentine Mott Professor and Johnson & Johnson Distinguished Professor and Chairman

Keith Reemtsma. B.S., Idaho State, 1945; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Frank Gump. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., New York University, 1955

David V. Habif (Morris and Rose Milstein Professor). B.S., Columbia, 1936; M.D.

1939 Frederic P. Herter (Hugh Auchincloss Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., 1944 Robert B. Hiatt. B.S., Wilmington, 1938; M.D., Cincinnati, 1942 Thomas C. King. B.A., Utah, 1950; M.D., 1954; M.A., Missouri, 1963 John M. Kinney. B.A., Denison, 1943; M.D., Harvard, 1946 Thomas J. Krizek. B.S. Marquette, 1954; M.D., 1957; M.A., Yale, 1974 John B. Price, Jr. M.A., Texas, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1950 Thomas V. Santulli. B.S., Columbia, 1935; M.D., Georgetown, 1939

Professors of Clinical Surgery

Harold G. Barker. B.A., Utah, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1943 Bard Cosman. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955 James R. Malm. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1946 Arthur B. Voorhees, Jr. B.A., Virginia, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Associate Professor

Mark A. Hardy. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

SURGERY 127

Associate Professor of Pathology

Nicole Suciu-Foca. B.S., Bucharest (Rumania), 1954; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgery

Joseph A. Buda. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

Richard N. Edie. B.A., Princeton, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Carl R. Feind. B.A., Texas, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Alfred Jaretzki III. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D.,1944

Alfred M. Markowitz. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1952 Frederick R. Randall. B.S., Howard, 1942; M.D., 1945 Francis C. Symonds, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951 Bashir Ahmad Zikria. B.S., George Washington, 1954; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1958

Associate Clinical Professors

Hugh Auchincloss, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

Charles W. Findlay. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Kenneth Forde. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1959

David M. Ju. M.D., National Medical College (Shanghai), 1944; Med.Sc.D., Columbia,

1954 Sven Kister. B.A., Dartmouth, 1955; M.D., Harvard, 1958 John N. Schullinger. B.A., Princeton, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 Philip D. Wiedel. B.S., Cannes (France), 1934; B.A., Columbia. 1938; M.D., 1941

Senior Research Associate

William H. Dobelle. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1964; Ph.D., Utah, 1974

Senior Research Associate of Biochemistry

David Elwyn. B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

David Bregman. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1965 Paul Lo Gerfo. B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1961; M.S., 1963; M.D., State

University of New York (Upstate), 1967 Henry M. Spotnitz. B.A., Harvard, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Irving Goodman. B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., 1944

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

Robert G. Bertsch. B.A., Carleton, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Ivo P. Janecka. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1965

128 SURGERY

Assistant Clinical Professor

Paul H. Gerst. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL SURGERY Richard J. Gusberg, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Malayappa Jeevanandam, Ph.D. Duncan L. McCollester, Ph.D. Shanta M. Modak, M.D., Ph.D. Ben T. Sandler, M.D. Otto A. Szekely

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY Vincent W. Ansanelli, M.D. Alfred A. Azzoni, M.D. Robert G. Blabey, M.D. Harold M. Brack, M.D. Sherman M. Bull, M.D. Roman Nowygrod, M.D. Charles A. Slanetz, M.D. Phillip W. Thieman, M.D. James S. Todd, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Jerald Ray Evans, M.D. Gregory F. Klomp, M.D. Rita Lipton, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Frank J. Flammino, Ph.D. David C. Henderson, Ph.D. Hiroshi Hashiguchi, M.D. Charles Marrin, M.B.B.S. Esther Meyer, M.A. Kazunari Satake Joseph Turkel, Ph.D. Calvin Y. H. Wong, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER William A. Gardner, M.D. Raffaele Lattes, M.D.

LECTURERS

Shivaji B. Bhonslay, M.D.

George Escher, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgery

David A. Blumenstock. B.A., Union (Schenectady), 1949; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Associate Clinical Professors

Rodman D. Carter (in Urology). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 John E. Olson. B.A., Kansas, 1953; M.D., 1956

Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery

Roger W. MacMillan III. B.S., Trinity, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professor

Edward J. Carey, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL SURGERY James Bordley IV, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Surgery

Harold P. Freeman. B.A., Catholic, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1958

SURGERY 129

Associate Clinical Professors

David M. Carberry. John E. Hutchinson. Robert F. Morton. John W. Parker, Jr. Eugene T. Quash.

Ph.D., Providence, 1947; M.D., Jefferson, 1951

B.S., Morehouse, 1953; M.D., Meharri/, 1957 M.D., Meharry, 1944

B.A., Fisk, 1942; M.D., Meharry, 1945 B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.D., Howard, 1946

Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery

Barbara Barlow. B.A., New York University, 1946; D.D.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1953

Assistant Clinical Professors

Salvatore G. Cinque. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.D., Loyola,

1946 Jacob K. Crittenden. M.D., Kentucky, 1971 James E. C. Norris. B.A., Hampton Institute, 1953; M.D., Case Western Reserve,

1957 Ruben Oropeza. B.S., Mexico, 1948; M.D., 1955 Carlton E. Patrick. M.D., University of the Saar (Hamburg, Germany), 1957

Assistant Clinical Professor of Neurological Surgery

Robert W. Schick. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL SURGERY Matthew D. Branche, M.D. Eustace E.S. Corbin, M.D. S. Jerome Dickinson, M.D. Rajinder Gandhi, M.D. Urbano K. Guarin, M.D. Malcolm Moley, M.D. Vincent Porter, M.D. Lawrence E. Taylor, M.D. Pierre G. Van Bockstaele, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY

James Bordley, M.D.

Egel Francois, M.D.

Ganepola A. Ganepola, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Edoardo Giuliani, M.D. Robert W. Holtzman, M.D. Avtar S. Josen, M.D. Barnett Miller, M.D. John R. Nailor, M.D. Max Yergan, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

George V. DiGiocinto, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL NEUROSURGERY

Michael Rapak, M.D. Gurmukh S. Walha, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Richard W. Brenner. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

David Befeler. B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., 1959

Robert Specht. B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1946

130 SURGERY

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES {continued) ASSOCIATES (continued)

SURGERY Frank F. Kaiser, M.D. Lester Silver, M.D.

Bruce J. Brener, M.D. Robert E. Knapp, M.D. Jerome Spivack, M.D.

John H. Cooper, M.D. Daniel L. Moore, M.D. John V. Triolo, M.D.

Douglas M. Costabile, M.D. Saverio J. Panzarino, M.D. E. Bruce Whitesell, M.D.

Victor D'Ambrosio, M.D. Morton Perkoff, M.D. Charles J. Wittmann, Jr., M.D. John Joseph Hudock, M.D.

At Roosevelt Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgery

Walter Wichern. B.S., Mount Union, 1942; M.D., Harvard, 1945

Associate Clinical Professors

William H. Cassebaum. B.A., Cornell, 1927; M.D., 1931

Richard G. Eaton. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1951; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1955

Joseph Ford. B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

Charles C. Harrold, Jr. B.S., Georgia, 1937; M.D., Harvard, 1941

Adrian Lambert, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1930; M.D., Columbia, 1934

J. William Littler. M.D., Duke, 1942

Cedric J. Priebe, Jr. B.S., Fordham, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

James B. Rodgers. B.A., Virginia, 1944; M.D., 1948

Thomas S. Royster. B.A., North Carolina, 1940; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1943

Assistant Clinical Professors

H. Clay Alexander. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1961

John T. Brennan, Jr. M.D., Harvard, 1950

Thomas Dailey. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Cornell, 1961

Paul D. Harris. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

William V. Healey, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

James A. MacDonald. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Robert J. Mulcare. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961

James H. Terry, Jr. B.S., Arizona, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

T. Scudder Winslow, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1938; M.D., Cornell, 1942

Chin Bor Yeoh. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY Clarence A. Dunn, Jr., M.D. John J. Keyser, M.D. Richard A. Marks, M.D. Walter H. Stingle, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Professor of Surgery

Hugh F. Fitzpatrick (Clark Professor). Creighton, 1942; M.D., 1943

Professor of Clinical Surgery

Richard B. Stark. B.A., Stanford, 1936; M.D., Cornell, 1941

SURGERY . UROLOGY 131

Associate Professor of Microbiology

George A. Hashim. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

George E. Green. B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D.. 1965 W. Graham Knox. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1942 Robert E. McCabe. B.A., Williams, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1953 Edward G. Stanley-Brown. M.D., Pennsylvania, 1948

Assistant Clinical Professors

Peter A. Bossart. B.A., Muhlenberg, 1947; M.D., Cornell, 1951

Robert T. Edmunds. B.A., Harvard, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Conrad G. Lattes. B.S., Swarthmore, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Haroutane A. Mekhjian. B.S., American (Beirut), 1961; M.D., 1965

Robert E. Miller. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1957 Howard R. Nay. B.A., Virginia Military Institute, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956 Carl S. Oakman. B.A., Harvard, 1933; M.D., Tufts, 1943

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

SURGERY

Charles R. Blair, M.D.

Peter B. Cinelli, M.D.

Clayton, R. De Haan, M.D.

Peter B. Fodor, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Philip E. Gordon, M.D. Leif O. Holgersen, M.D. Joshua M. Kaplan, M.D. Danne R. Lorieo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Paul I. Tomljanovich, M.D. Hiroshi Washio, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Mikio Kamiyama, Ph.D.

Urology

Professor and Chairman

John K. Lattimer. B.A., Columbia, 1935; M.D., 1938; Med.Sc.D., 1943

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor of Clinical Urology

Ralph J. Veenema. B.A., Calvin, 1952; M.D., Jefferson, 1945

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Myron Tannenbaum. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D., 1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Urology

Peter J. Puchner. B.A., Carleton, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Nicholas A. Romas. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Aurelio Uson. M.D., Barcelona (Spain), 1950

132 UROLOGY

Associate Clinical Professors

Stanley B. Braham. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947 Frank W. Longo. B.S., Maryland, 1951; M.D., 1955

Myron S. Roberts. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1954

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Philip Tomashefsky. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistant Professors of Clinical Urology

John D. Birkoff. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Terry W. Hensle. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1964; M.D., Cornell, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professors

Elliot L. Cohen. B.A., New York University, 1963; M.D., Chicago, 1967

Peter N. De Sanctis. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1962

J. Timothy Donovan. M.D., New York Medical College, 1948

Louis J. Dougherty. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

John P. Grant. B.A., Amherst, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Michael W. Justice. B.A., Kansas, 1950; M.D., 1954

Michael H. Wechsler. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1961; M.D., St. Louis, 1965

Robert R. White. B.A., Amherst, 1949; M.D., Rochester, 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

UROLOGY UROLOGY UROLOGY

Charles E. Umhey, Jr., Frederick S. Dick, M.D. John C. Byrne, M.D.

M.D. Leonard J. Rudin, M.D. Robert L. Pickens, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE SPECIAL LECTURER

Stanford Pulrang, M.D. Bruno Fingerhut, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery

Rodman D. Carter. B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY Bruce MacDonald, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Harold A. Games. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1951

At Overlook Hospital

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL UROLOGY ASSOCIATES (continued)

Kenneth L. Day, M.D. Joseph S. Ritter, M.D.

Pascal A. Pironti, M.D. Morey Wosnitzer, M.D.

UROLOGY 133

At Roosevelt Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Perrin B. Snyder. B.S., New York University, 1929; M.D., 1933

Assistant Clinical Professors

William J. Nelson. B.A., Williams, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1946 Robert D. Wickham. B.A., Drew, 1947; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1952

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY James W. Vastola, M.D.

At St. Luke's Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Russell W. Lavengood, Jr. B.A., St. Joseph's (Indiana), 1947; M.D., Louisville, 1951

Assistant Professor of Clinical Urology

Manuel Fernandes. M.D., Coimbra (Portugal), 1956

Assistant Clinical Professor

Joseph N. Ward. M.B., B.Ch., University College (Dublin), 1949

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued) INSTRUCTORS (continued)

UROLOGY Alfred F. Fretz, M.D. Alexander Sotiropoulos,

Arumbi P. Subramaniam, Waleed G. Maloof, M.D. M.D.

M.D. Constantine Photos, M.D. Rudolph D. Talarico, M.D.

William R. Pitts, Jr., M.D. INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL u r, D *■ ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

UROLOGY Joseph D. Putignano, urology

Philip C. Cea, M.D. ^D- Abas Rezvani, M.D.

Harry S. David, M.D.

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1979

Aisen, Paul S. Case Western Reserve University Hospitals, Cleveland, Ohio. Medi- cine Alexander, David T. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Arden, James R. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Hanover, New Hamp- shire. Medicine Barry, Elizabeth. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, New York. Medicine Barry, M. Anita. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Barton, Brooke M. University of California, Los Angeles Neuropsychiatric Institute,

Los Angeles, California. Psychiatry Bassett, Mary T. Harlem Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Becker, Mary Alice. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Bernstein, Debra J. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Bisserup, Robert S.. Harlem Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Bitetti, Janice M. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Blumenthal, Celia B. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Boucher, Ralph A. Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, Illinois. Medicine Boxhill, Agnes M. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Brandt-Rauf, Paul W. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pathology Brin, Mitchell F. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Cadet, Jean L. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Flexible Cafferty, Maureen S. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Cali, Michael D. Montefiore Hopsital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Camras, Carl B. Los Angeles County Harbor General Hospital, Torrance, Califor- nia. Medicine Chodos, Joel E. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Cogen, Fran R. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Conway, Stephen R. Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia. Medicine Craig, Michael J. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Creger, Philip S. Kaiser Foundation Hospital, San Francisco, California. Medicine Csete, Marie E. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine De Felipo, Noel P. Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Di Biase, John J. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Surgery Diefenbach, William P. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Surgery Edinburgh, David M. University of Texas Southwestern Affiliated Hospitals, Dallas,

Texas. Obstetrics and Gynecology Evans, Walter F. University of Texas Southwestern Affiliated Hospitals, Dallas,

Texas. Obstretics and Gynecology Flick, Jonathan A. Case Western Reserve University Hospitals, Cleveland,

Ohio. Pediatrics Forem, Sandra L. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Francomano, Thomas J. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Sur- gery Frankel, Etta B. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Gilbard, Jeffrey P. Stanford University Hospital, Stanford, California. Medicine Gordon, Kimberly. Hospitals of the University Health Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylva- nia. Pediatrics Grelsamer, Ronald P. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Surgery Harary, Albert M. University of Miami Affiliated Hospitals, Miami, Florida. Medi- cine Hensel, Bruce M. University of California, Los Angeles Neuropsychiatric Institute, Los Angeles, California. Psychiatry

FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1979 135

Holmberg, Scott D. Roger Williams General Hospital, Providence, Rhode

Island. Medicine Horowitz, Nina R. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Sur- gery Hradesky, Christine L. Los Angeles Counts/ Harbor General Hospital, Torrance,

California. Psychiatry Jacobs, Michael A. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Surgery Jacobson, Ira M. University of California Hospitals, San Francisco, California. Medi- cine Johnson, Lawrence P. University of Texas Southwestern Affiliated Hospitals, Dallas,

Texas. Surgery Jozefowicz, Ralph F. Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, New York. Medicine Kahn, David A. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Kahn, Jeffrey P. Overlook Hospital, Summit New Jersey. Flexible Katz, Martha E. Montefiore Hospital Center, New York, New York. Family Prac- tice Kelsey, Peter B. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Knapp, Albert B. Bronx Municipal Hospital, Bronx, New York. Medicine Knox, Karen B. St. Louis University Group Hospitals, St. Louis, Missouri. Obstetrics

and Gynecology Korn, Jane E. University of Minnesota Hospitals, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Medicine Kosovsky, Karen A. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Kucharchik, Thomas. Medical University of South Carolina Hospitals, Charleston,

South Carolina. Family Practice Kudlak, Theresa T. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Kurth, Donald J. The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland. Surgery Kwiatkowski, David J. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachu- setts. Medicine Labinson, Robert M. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Lamm, Joel L. Mount Zion Hospital, San Francisco, California. Medicine Lee, David K. P. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michi- gan. Medicine Lehman, Lawrence B. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Leibowitz, Steven. Stanford University Hospital, Stanford, California. Medicine Leventhal, Jeanne L. New York University Medical Center, New York, New

York. Psychiatry Levitan, Sara A. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Levitt, Lynn C. University of Virginia Hospital, Charlottesville, Virginia. Surgery Li, Lawrence. Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. Family

Practice Liskin, Barbara A. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Litsky, Alan S. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Hanover, New Hamp- shire. Surgery Lowe, Franklin C. The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland. Surgery McCrimons, Daniel E. Children's Memorial Hospital of Northwestern University,

Chicago, Illinois. Pediatrics McDonald, Patricia A. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Flexible Madoff , Robert D. University of Minnesota Hospitals, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Sur- gery Manson, Carolyn. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Marchese, Anne C. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Mark, Laurence P. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Marks, Elizabeth L. New York University -Veterans Administration Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine

136 FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1979

Martin, Eva. University of California (Irvine) Affiliated Hospitals, Irvine, Califor- nia. Obstetrics and Gynecology Matsuba, Howard M. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Merkow, Robert L. Hennepin County General Hospital, Minneapolis, Minneso- ta. Surgery Miller, Andrew D. Los Angeles County Harbor General Hospital, Torrance, Califor- nia. Pediatrics Miller, Ronald W. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Morrison, David S. University of Utah Affiliated Hospitals, Salt Lake City,

Utah. Surgery Muncaster, Richard B. Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, New

York. Surgery Orell, Jeffrey A. Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut. Medicine Orenstein, Harry H. New York University Medical Center, New York, New

York. Surgery Packer, Michael G. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecti- cut. Surgery Palmisano, Joanne J. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medi- cine Perez, Nydia E. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Peyser, Karen E. Case Western Reserve University Hospitals, Cleveland, Ohio. Pe- diatrics Polan, H. Jonathan. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Pollack, David M. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Pollack, Geoffrey J. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Pollack, Steven A. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Purcell, Ralph N. Baylor College Affiliated Hospitals, Houston, Texas. Medicine Quarnstrom, Thomas J. Tripler Army Medical Center, Honolulu, Hawaii. Family

Practice Raiken, Deborah F. Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Pediatrics Ronner, Hilary J. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Flexible Rosenstein, Dwight. North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, New York. Medi- cine Ross, Alan B. University of California Hospital, Los Angeles, California. Obstetrics

and Gynecology Rubinstein, Alina A. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Psychia- try Russo, Paul. Washington University Affiliated Hospitals, St. Louis, Missouri. Sur- gery Satlin, Lisa M. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Scerbo, James A. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michi- gan. Medicine Schlesinger, Mark P. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Schwartz, Harold I. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Sciascia, Thomas R. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michi- gan. Medicine Seaman, Cheryl. New York Hospital- Westchester Division, White Plains, New

York. Psychiatry Sebag, Jerry. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Medicine Seitz, William H. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Shapiro, David M. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michi- gan. Surgery Shea, Steven J.C. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Siegel, Robert E. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine

FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1979 137

Siegfried, Virginia A. University of California Hospital, Los Angeles, California. Ob- stetrics and Gynecology Silbert, Glenn R. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Sinns, Katherine B. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Pediat- rics Sims, Nathaniel M. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Sur- gery Stackhouse, Thomas G. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor,

Michigan. Orthopedic Surgery Stark, Barbara J. University of Texas Southwestern Affiliated Hospitals, Dallas,

Texas. Medicine Stein, H. David. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Flexible Sternfeld, Nancy L. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Stevens, Laurie A. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Sur- gery Stork, Linda C. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Struthers, Charlene M. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Pathol- ogy Stuchiner, David J. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Psy- chiatry Sulis Carol A. Roger Williams Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island. Medicine Sybert, Peter E. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Medicine Taus, Richard H. Good Samaritan Hospital, Los Angeles, California. Medicine Thane, Michael W. Roger Williams Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island. Medicine Werner, Morgan S. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michi- gan. Medicine Wissel, Pauls. Ohio State University Hospitals, Columbus, Ohio. Medicine Witzel, Phyllis B. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Wormser, Andrew C. Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, New York. Medicine Yacovone, Joseph F. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Flexible Zatzkis, Mark A. University of California Hospital, Los Angeles, California. Medi- cine Zolnick, Lawrence A. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Zuflacht, Richard N. Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, lllimios. Medicine

Student Roster: Class of 1980

Ahlborn, Thomas Nesbitt Wilmette, 111. B.A., Harvard, 1975

Allan, Anne Elizabeth Wilmington, Del. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1976

Anderson, Nancy Ann New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976

Anthony, Kent Ervin Cleveland, Tenn. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Apfelbaum, Terri Francine New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976

Appel, Rena Lee New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1972

Bello, Jacqueline Anne Rye, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1976

Berkeley, Hope Ann Jersey City, N.J. B.A., Barnard, 1972

Bernstein, Carol Ann Holywood, Fla. B.A., BrynMawr, 1969

Bernstein, Wendy Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1976

Bluh, Donald Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1973

Blumenkehl, Mark Lewis Paterson, N.J. B.A., Brooklyn College, 1976

Boakye-Adjei, Oheneba Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn College, 1976

Bogen, Craig Alan Coram, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1976

Bransford, Kent Jackson Anaheim, Calif. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1976

Brudney, Karen Florence Cambridge, Mass. B.A., Yale, 1973

Cartelli, Nancy Ann Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Hunter, 1976

138 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1980

Casper, Theodore Pearl River, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1976 Chow, John Hei-Sing Corona, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1976 Cohen, David Eliot Teaneck, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1976

Cuadros, Cesar Luis Santa Monica, Calif. B.S., California (Los Angeles), 1975 Czaj a, Mark James Natick, Mass. B. A., Yale, 1976 Danso, Alex Kingsley New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1976

Davey, Richard Thomas Dix Hills, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy, 1976 DeAngelis, Lisa Marie New Haven, Conn. Wellesley Deland, Jonathan Thorndike Darien, Conn. B. A., Harvard, 1976 Delaney, Kathleen Ann Los Angeles, Calif. B.S., California (Irvine), 1972 Dennison, Allen Mansfield Bronx, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1975 Dillon, Peter Riverside, Conn. B.S., Harvard, 1976 Dolinsky, Paul Arthur Hartford, Conn. B.S., Tufts, 1976 Downey, Richard Stuart New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Dubin, Leslie Beryl New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1976 Dwosh, Jack White Sulfur Springs, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1976 Ecker, Kendrik Michel Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1975 Engler, Alan Michael Weston, Mass. B.A., Yale, 1976 Epner, Elliot M. North Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1976 Epstein, Joel Harvey Albertson, N.Y. B. A., Sarah Lawrence, 1976 Fakharzadeh, Frederick F. Teaneck, N.J. B.A., Cornell, 1976 Farrell, Matthew Michael Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1974 Fehrs, Laura J. Armonk, N.Y. B.A., Kirkland, 1976 Feiman, Nancy Beth New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976 Feller, Matthew Frederick Bayside, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1976 Fisher, William A. Bantam, Conn. B.S., Yale, 1976 Fithian, Eileen Marie Lititz, Pa. B.A., Pittsburgh, 1972 Flamm, Michael Jay New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976 Fox, Joyce Ellen New York, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1976 Fox, Susan C. New York, N.Y. B.S., Ohio State, 1971 Friedmann, Martin Lewis North Salem, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1973 Gardine, Robert Louis Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Gelfand, Janice Marcy Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1975 Geller, Peter Levine Brookside, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1971 Genkins, Steven Mark New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976 Geraci, Kira Antonia Malverne, N.Y. B.A., Adelphi, 1976 Goland, Robin Stephanie Skokie, 111. B.A., Radcliffe, 1976 Goodrich, James B.S., California (Irvine), 1974 Graney, John Francis Swarthmore, Pa. B.A., Swarthmore, 1973 Griffin, Patrick Herbert Tulsa, Okla. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Grundfest, Warren Scott Belleville, N.J. B.A., Swarthmore, 1975 Hamm, Peter Gerard Washington, D.C. B. A., Princeton, 1976 Handlin, David Stephen North Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1976 Handwerger, Sandra Dee N. Bellmore, N.Y. B.A., Vassar, 1976 Hardy, Howard Wesley III Washington, D.C. B.A., Harvard, 1976 Harris, David Alan Beverly Hills, Calif. B.S., Yale, 1976 Herbert, Robert Alan Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Hollenberg, James Paul Great Neck, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1976 Holes, Richard Eric West Hartford, Conn. B.S., Trinity, 1976 Howell, John Taylor III Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. B.S., Princeton, 1976 Hurwitz, Samuel Michael Hamden, Conn. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Ilowsky, Barbara P. Highland Park, N.J. S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy, 1976 Jacobson, Wendy Nan Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1976 Kawata, Carol Lynn Los Angeles, Calif. B. A., Stanford, 1976

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1980 139

Kiest, Curtis Alan Portland, Ore. B.A., Harvard, 1976

Kumaki, David James Dolton, 111. B.A., Chicago, 1976

Langendorf, Frederick New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1973

LaPook, Jonathan David Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1975

La Sala, Patrick Cedar Grove, N.J. B.S., St. Peter's, 1975

Lauderdale, Bradley Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1976

'Lee, Dennis Elliott Rochester, N.Y. B.S., Brown, 1976

Leff, Steven Russell Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Legant, Paul Morris Tempe, Ariz. B.A., Whittier, 1970

Levin, Daniel H. Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Lewis, Barbara Ann Shorewood, Wis. B.A., Wisconsin, 1975

Lipkin, Alan Frederick Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Rochester, 1976

Lipschitz, Sherman Scott Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Lipson, Mindy Ann St. Paul, Minn. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1976 Lurio, Joseph G. Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Lyle, Henry Richard Nutting Lake, Mass. B. A., Harvard, 1976 McCann, Peter Damion New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975 Macchi, Paul J. Westchester, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 McCluskey, Leo Francis West Paterson, N.J. B.S., Boston, 1976 Mackenzie, Jane Atkinson Greenfield, N.H. B.S., Brown, 1976 McKinley, George Franklin Glasgow, Ky. B.A., Louisville, 1976 Malin, Barnet David Beverly Hills, Calif. B.A., Brown, 1976 Mandelbaum, David B.A., Columbia, 1964

Manelis, Jocelyn Beth Fall River, Mass. B.A., Wellesley, 1976 Maxwell, Celia J. New York, N.Y. B.S., Hunter, 1973 Mazzeo, Vincent Paul Brookville, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Minikes, Neil Ira Jericho, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1974 Moley, Jeffrey Fletcher Quogue, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1976 Morris, Valery Lois New Milford, N.J. B. A., Princeton, 1976 Murphy-Chutorian, Douglas Roger Queens, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1976 Navia, Bradford Armando Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Newman, Bernard Patrick III Nanuet, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1976 Nunez, Domingo C. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 O'Connell, Genevieve Cecilia Waterbury, Conn. B.A., Connecticut, 1972 O'Laughlin, Martin Pius Kansas City, Mo. B.A., Harvard, 1976 Oliver, Dennis Carey Delhi, N.Y. B.S., Georgetown, 1976 Orentriech, David Scott New York, N.Y. B.S., Hobart, 1976 Pankewycz, Oleh George New Brunswick, N.J. B.S., Rutgers, 1976 Paradis, Marc Andre Belmont, Mass. B.A., Holy Cross, 1976 Parnes, Anita Lynn New York, N.Y. B.A., Radcliffe, 1976 Paul, Matthew David Teaneck, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1975 Pfeffer, Sondra Jane New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976 Quevedo, Jonathan Paul Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1976 Radin, Arthur Irwin Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976 Ressa, Ames Daniel Port Washington, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1976 Roman, Mary Jean Indianapolis, Ind. B.A., Barnard, 1974 Romano, Angela Antonia Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Barnard, 1976 Rosenfield, Suzanne Syosset, N.Y. B. A., Sarah Lawrence, 1975 Rubenfeld, Marian Ruth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976

Rund, Deborah Gasner New York, N.Y. B.A., City College of New York, 1970 Saber, William Leland Freeport, N.Y. B. A., Hampshire, 1976 Sahar, David I. Rutherford, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1975 Sakwa, Marc Peter Southfield, Mich. B.A., Brown, 1976 Schiz, Steven L. Valley Stream, N.Y. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1976 Schlam, Julia Frances Oradell, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1976

140 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1980 CLASS OF 1981

Schloss, Stephen Bertram Forest Hills, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1976

Schulz, Danielle Eve Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1976

Scott, Wendell O. Randolph, Mass. B.S., Tufts, 1976

Segal, Michael Myer Cambridge Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1976

Serdarevic, Olivera Natalie Goshen, N.Y. B. A., Barnard, 1976

Shapiro, Peter Andrew Chicago, 111. B.A., Princeton, 1976

Sharanevych, Irene Sophia Irvington, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1976

Softness, Barney Glen Cove, N.Y. B. A., Amherst, 1976

Solomon, Meryl Levey Bronx, N.Y. B.A., City College of New York, 1976

Starker, Paul Matthew Nyack, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1976

Steinberg, Robin Faith Long Beach, N.Y. B. A., Smith 1976

Sullivan, Mary Anna Lowell, Mass. B.A., Dartmouth, 1976

Swiderski, Deborah M. Syracuse, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1971

Talbot, Paul Anthony Queens, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975

Teichman, Sam Leopold Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Thomas, Natalia Elena Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Radcliffe, 1976

Ultmann, Monica Chicago, 111. B.A., Oberlin, 1975

Waltner, Nancy Madeleine New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1976

Wescoe, Sibyl Douglas, Kan. B.A., Kansas, 1975

Weinstock, Ruth B.A., Smith, 1974

West, Sally Agnes. New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1973

Wiznia, Andrew Alan. Little Neck, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1976

Yellin, Tova Gail. Aurora, 111. B.A., Barnard, 1976

Zeidel, Mark Lawrence. Waitsfield, Vt. B.S., M.S., Yale, 1976

Zwas, Felice Rosel. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976

Student Roster: Class of 1981

Adams, Roberta Harris. BronxvilPe, N.Y. B.S., Antioch, 1977

Aiken, Brenda. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Aldea, Gabriel-Sorin. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Altshuler, Steven Lane. Englewood, N.J. B.A., Rochester, 1977

Amador, Jorge Luis. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1975

Apfelbaum, Mark. New York, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Appleton, Abraham T. Englewood, N.J. B.A., Yeshiva, 1976

Aranow, Robert Bittman Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Arildsen, Ronald Curtis Endicott, N.Y. B.S., M.S., Yale, 1977

Auletta, Maria Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.S., St. Francis, 1977

Ausubel, Kalman Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Bauman, Phillip Allen Larchmont, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1976

Beane, Susan Jo Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Beitz, Julie Germaine Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Blackwood, Roland Alexander New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Booth, Richard Linn Cambridge, Ohio B. A., Princeton, 1977

Broom, Michael Joseph Sudbury, Mass. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Butler, Annette Louise Laurelton, N.Y. B.S., Queens, 1977

Byrne, Jeffrey Michael Sherborn, Mass. B.S., Massachusetts, 1977

Cagliostro, Stephen Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Capaldo, Maria Elena New York, N.Y. B.S., Hunter, 1970

Carson, JoAnn Monroe, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977

Castiglione, Charles L. Hamden, Conn. B.A., Yale, 1977

Chandra, Elizabeth Stuart New York, N.Y. B.A., Gaucher, 1972

Clinton, Henry Louis New York, B.A., Columbia, 1977

Cohen, Paul Jay Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Cohen, Ron New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1981 141

Collymore, Victor Alvin Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Colon-Linares, Juan Ponce, Puerto Rico Iowa

Cotto, Sonla Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Cutillo, Robert Paul Montclair, N.J. B.S., Georgetown, 1977

Degreef, Gustav Lido Beach, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1976

Deluty, Sheldon Howard Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Devinsky, Orrin South Orange, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1977

Diao, Edward Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Diaz, Angela New York, N.Y. City College of New York, 1976

Dick, Alison B. Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1977

Drucker, Elizabeth Anne San Mateo, Calif. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Drury, Bernard J. Santa Barbara, Calif. B.S., San Francisco, 1975

Ehrlich, Carol Margaret New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Elliott, Deirdre Davina New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1977

Esposito, Robert M. Uniondale, N.Y. B.A., Adelphi, 1974

Feit, David Louis Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1977

Feld, Randy Jay Massapequa Park, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977

Flatow, Evan Lloyd New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Freedman, Susan Dee Palo Alto, Calif. B. A., Yale. 1975

Freyberg, Christopher Wm. Pleasantville, N.Y. B.S., Wisconsin, 1977

Garrett, Jeffrey S. Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1977

Gendler, Ellen Caryn Bellmore, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1977

Gertler, Jonathan Paul New York, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1977

Glantz, Sanford David Rosedale, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1977

Goldberg, David Michael Stamford, Conn. B.A., Yale, 1974

Goldstein, Nannette Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1973

Golub, Robert Matthew Newburgh, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Gravallese, Ellen M. Andover, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Grossl, Eugene Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Grunberg, Eva Lillian Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1977

Hayes, Dewleen Gay Atherton, Calif. B.A., Stanford, 1968

Holubowitch, Edward J. Warwick, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Hresko, Michael Timothy Flint, Mich. B.A., Harvard, 1976

Katzman, Michael Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Kellman, Howard David Monongahela, Pa. B.A., Stanford, 1974

Kirby, Mathis Ann Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1977

Kleiman, Neal Stephen Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Kutscher, Martin Lyle Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Kwon, Peter Heejoon, Jr. Los Angeles, Calif. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of

Technology, 1977 Landaw, Irene Sarah Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Purchase), 1976 Landy, Harold Stephen New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1972 Le, XuanHaThi Clarence, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1977 Lee, Timothy Leslie Sacramento, Calif. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1977 Lehmann, Harold Philip New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977 Levin, Marc Stephen New Rochelle, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of

Technology, 1977 Levine, Alice Carla New York, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Albany), 1973 Lipman, Steve Paul Huntington, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977 Louard, Rita Jean Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1976 Lowy, Israel Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977 Lubka, Rhonda Hartford, Conn. B.A., Barnard, 1977 Ludwig, Robert Lewis Merrick, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977 Mackey, Steven Lee South Columbus, Ohio B.A., Columbia, 1976 Marshall, Mitchell H. New York, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1974 Miro, Claudio Lazaro West Orange, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1977

142 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1981

Moss, Barbara Ann Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1967

Moy, Larry Bronx, N.Y. B.S., City College of New York, 1977

Muraszko, Karin Marie New Providence, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1977

Murphy, Stephen Gerard North Attleboro, Mass. B.S., Columbia, 1977

Muschel, MichaelJ. Monsey, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Nercessian, Ohannes A. Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Lehman, 1977

Nerenstone, Stacy Ruth Iowa City, Iowa B.A., Brown, 1977

Oppedisano, Carlyn Ann Roslyn Heights, N.Y. B.A., Adelphi, 1977

Orland, Steven M. Cherry Hill, N.J. B. A., Princeton, 1977

Ozick, Lisa A. Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., City College of New York, 1977

Palazzolo, Michael John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Fatsos, Theodore John Canton, Mass. B.A., Brown, 1977

Pellicone, John Thomas Clinton, Conn. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Peress, Richard Eliot Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1977

Perofsky, Howard Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.A., City College of New York, 1977

Petchler, Janet Caroline Hamden, Conn. B.A., Vassar, 1976

Raby, Khether Emile Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1977

Regan, Raymond Francis Edgewater, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1977

Richmond, Kenneth Herbert Providence, R.I. B.A., Brown, 1971

Rifkin, Terry Paul Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Roberts, James Michael Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977

Rogers, David Michael East Rockaway, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1977

Rosenfield, Howard T. Newton Center, Mass. B.A., Brandeis, 1968

Rosenthal, Robert Bruce West Hartford, Con. B.S., Yale, 1976

Ross, Richard Steven Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Rozmaryn, Leo Martin Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1977

Rudolph, Michael Alan Beverly Hills, Calif. B.S., Stanford, 1977

Sabir, Rafiq New York, N.Y. B.A., City College of New York, 1977

Sax, Frederic Lee Rosedale, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977

Scantlebury, Velma Patricia Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Long Island, 1977

Seely, Ellen Wells New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977

Shah, Dipti V. Fresh Meadows, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Shear, Michael Peter Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Purchase), 1977

Shookster, Linda Anne Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Siegel, Robert David Jersey City, N.J. B.A., Lafayette, 1977

Sisti, Michael Brian Tenafly, N.J. B.S.E., Cooper Union, 1977

Small, Peter Alan Easton, Conn. B.A., Tufts, 1977

Smithy, William Brian Brookline, Mass. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Sobelson, Gary Alan North Bellmore, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Solomon, Barry Howard Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. B.S., American (Rome), 1975

Speert, Peter Klee Brookline, Mass. B.A., Williams, 1966

Stein, Neil Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Stern, Fredric A. Rockville Centre, N.Y. B.A., B.S., Tufts, 1977

Stoler, Joan Marilyn Brookline, Mass. B.S., Brandeis, 1977

Stone, Gary Carl Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Sulkow, Barbara Lynn B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1974

Teitelbaum, Joanne New York, N.Y. B.A., Connecticut, 1968

Valdes, Martin Hialeah, Fla. B.A., Miami, 1977

Vaughan, Luke Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Voutsas, Andrea K. Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holy oke, 1977

Wagman, Robert David Ontario, Canada B. A., Harvard, 1977

Warren, Susan Enid New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1973

Wasko, Margery Lynn Bronxville, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1977

Weidenbaum, Mark Waterford, Conn. B.S., Connecticut, 1977

Weinstein, Beth New York, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1974

Weinstock, Martin Arthur Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1977

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1981 -CLASS OF 1982 143

Weiss, Michael Jay Riverdale, N.Y. B.Sc, Bar-Ilan, 1972

Williams, John Vincent Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College of New York, 1977

Wilson, Scott Numo New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Wiseman, Gloria Diana New York, N.Y. B.S., City College of New York, 1977

Wood, Charles Macdonald Tenafly, N.J. B.S., Denison, 1976

Yannopoulos, Aristomenis D. Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Yepes, Martha Cecilia New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Young, Grace May-En Fairlawn, N.J. B.A., Radcliffe, 1977

Younger, David Steven Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Michigan, 1976

Zahl, Kenneth J. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1977

Zinberg, Joel Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Swarthmore, 1977

Zinberg, Jonathan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1977

Zola, Benjamin Elia West Hartford, Conn. B.A., B.S., Harvard, 1977

Zollo, Kenneth Allen Farmingdale, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1977

Student Roster: Class of 1982

Abrams, Elaine Janine Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Princeton, 1978

Absatz, Michael Glenn Plainview, N.Y. B.E.S., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Adler, Frederick William New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978

Aldoroty, Robert Arthur Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1976; M.A., Columbia,

1978 Almquist, Robert Earl Bergen, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978 Amchin, Jess David Farmingdale, N.Y. B. A., Cornell, 1978 Andrew, Susan Louise Easthampton, Mass. Sc.B., Brown, 1976 Aranoff, Jonathan Neil Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Beekman, Karen Press Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978 Bellin, Eran Yitzchak Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Bernstein, Guy Thomas Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Brown, 1978 Bezier, Jeffrey Lee Peshtigo, Wis. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Birkenbach, Mark Philip Kildeer, 111. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Blackwell, Thomas Keith Greenville, S.C. B.S., Duke, 1978 Boruchoff, Susan Elise Newton Centre, Mass. B.A., Radcliffe, 1977 Brauser, Steven Donald Woodbury, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Brenner, Gail Monsey, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1978 Brigham, Steven Chase Toledo, Ohio B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1978 Brooks, Robert Louis Sharpsburg, Md. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1974; M.S., Maryland, 1976; Ph.D., Maryland, 1978 Brown, Florence M. Evanston, 111. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Bryk, Eli New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Buchness, Mary Ruth Catonsville, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Burns, Elisa Eve Bethpage, N.Y. B.A., Colgate, 1978 Cammisa, Frank P. Waterbury, Conn. B.S., Tufts, 1978 Campbell, Susan Elizabeth New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1975 Cantor, Michael Cary Massapequa, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Cherup, Lori Lyn Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1976 Chua, Streamson, C. Kingston, N.Y. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1978 Clair, Darren Francis New York, N.Y. B. A., Princeton, 1976 Cody, William Collins Mountain Lakes, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978 Cohen, Jeffrey Lewis Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1978 Dash, Greg I. Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978 del Alcazar, Carlos Oscar North Bergen, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Delfs, Richard Michael Tucson, Ariz. B.A., Arizona, 1976 Derby, James Alan Schuylerville, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1978

144 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982

Dermody, Terence Shawn Ithaca, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1978

Delvin, Michael James Bardonia, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978

Downey, Susan E. New York, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1978

Doyle, Werner Karim Port Jefferson Station, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook),

1978 Durand, David Bradley Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978 Easton, Jonathan New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Endow, Curtis S. Stockton, Calif. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1977 Endrizzi, Donald Peter Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Fabiano, Fredric Boston, Mass. B.S., Boston, 1978 Feinberg, Richard Ira Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Trinity, 1977 Fiero, Thomas Patrtick Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977 Fletcher, Christopher Wallace Wellesley, Mass. B.A., Wesleyan, 1978 Formichella, Donna Jean Bridgeport, Conn. B.S., Providence, 1978 Frank, David Lawrence Meadowbrook, Pa. B.A., Williams, 1978 Gelbfish, Gary Alexander Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1978 Gilchrist, Ian Charles Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978 Gomez, William New York, N.Y. B.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

1976 Grant, Gail Patrice Charleston, S.C. B.A., Yale, 1978 Greenberg, Steven Marc Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Gresalfi, Thomas John Lake Grove, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978 Griswold, Jonathan DeWitt Stratford, Conn. B.S., M.S., Yale, 1978 Harmon, Valerie Lorraine Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Brown, 1978 Harrington, William Neelis Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1974 Hart, Craig Parsippany, N.J. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1973 Honig, Peter K. Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Hutt, Douglas Allen Irvington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Jabs, Kathy Lee Bristol, Conn. B.S., Trinity, 1978 Jackness, Emily New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978 Karasik, Pamela Ellen Old Westbury, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978 Kessler, Paul David New York, N.Y. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1976 King, Dennis K. Daytona Beach, Fla. B.A., Middlebury, 1978 Knoll, Charles L. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1978 Krauss, Eugene Steven Old Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978 Krug, Joseph Hoffmann Englewood, N.J. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1978 Levens, David Jon Newton Centre, Mass. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy, 1978 Levenson, Risa Catherine New York, N.Y. B.A., Radcliffe, 1978 Li, Suzanne C. Rosy In, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Licht, Jonathan Daniel Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978 Lobel, Leslie Israel New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Low, Julie Ann Belmont, Mass. B.A., Rochester, 1975 Lustbader, Ian Jay New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1978 Lynn, Richard Brian Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 McCormick, Paul Christian Rockville, Md., B.A., Columbia, 1978 Margolis, Steven Fred Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1974 Markowitz, John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976; M.A., 1978 Martin, Steven Carey Plainview, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Marzuk, Peter Michael New York, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1978 Mastropolo, Rosalie Mary Eastchester, N.Y. B.S.N. , Rochester, 1976 Mazzocchi, Annmarie Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1978 Mehalek, Karen Edith Huntington Station, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1978 Mellstrom, Mark Stanley North Mankato, Minn. B.A., Carleton, 1978 Mercurio, Mark Randolph Ridgefield, Conn. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Mirski, Anna Marie Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., St. John's, 1978

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982 145

Mitchell, Alfred Ernest Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Lafayette, 1978

Moffat, Gertrude Seidel Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977

Monasky, Mark Stephen Binghamton, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Potsdam), 1978

Moscona, Anne Chicago, 111. B.A., Radcliffe, 1978

Muller, Adrienne Louise Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1978

Norton, Janet E. Philadelphia, Pa. B. A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Nussbaum, Monte Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978

Oesterling, Joseph Edwin Greensburg, Ind. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Olson, Stephen Eric Cooperstown, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1978

Paul, Edward Mark Hicksville, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Pennoyer, Marguerite Anne Portland, Maine B.A., Smith, 1978

Perez, Wilfredo De La C. Miami, Fla. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Pfeffer, Deborah Lynn New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978

Philips, Mark Reid Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Plotycia, Steven Michael Eggertsville, N.Y. B.S., State University of New York

(Buffalo), 1978 Porder, Joseph Bernard New York, N.Y. B.A., Bennington, 1978 Price, Helen L. Summit, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1978

Quarmby, Robert Altamont, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1974; M.S., Rensse- laer Polytechnic Institute, 1978 Quartararo, Christopher Huntington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rini, Frank John New York, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1974; M.A., Colum- bia, 1976; M.Phil., 1977; Ph.D., 1978 Robbins, Peter Howard Fairlawn, N.J. B.A., Hamilton, 1978 Robbins, Philip Alan Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1978 Rodriguez, Jaime Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rodriguez, Rolando Francisco Weehawken, N.J. B. A., Columbia, 1978 Rosenblatt, Marc A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Rosenzweig, Seth Edward Freeport, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978 Rottman, Jeffrey Nathan Berkeley, Calif. B.A., Princeton, 1976 Ruzal-Shapiro, Carrie Brenda Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Salamone, Ronald Jerry East Brunswick, N.J. B.S., Stanford, 1977 Sanchez-Lluberas, Jorge A. Santurce, Puerto Rico B.S., University of Puerto Rico,

1978 Schlaff, Anthony Lewis New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978 Schneider, Peter Andrew Hamburg, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977 Schulder, Michael Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Sealfon, Stuart C. Neponsit, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Sehgal, Evan David Chevy Chase, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Shaffer, David Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978 Shaffer, Nathan New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1975 Sharp, Barbara Lea San Francisco, Calif. B.A., Yale, 1976 Sheinbaum, Roy Jonathan Woodmere, N.Y. B.Sc, McGill, 1978 Simkowitz, Philip New York, N.Y. B.S., Beloit, 1975 Sklar, Jeffrey Alan Laurelton, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978 Skowron, Gail East Northport, N.Y. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1978 Smith, Andre Leo New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1978 Smith, Mary Camden, N.Y. B.S., Houghton, 1978 Stevenson, Ellen Marie New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977 Strongin, Jonathan David New York, N.Y. M.A., Columbia, 1974 Sullivan, John Keane New York, N.Y. B.A., Holy Cross, 1969; J.D., School of Law,

Fordham, 1972 Sultan, Mark Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1978 Suser, Ezra Saul Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1974 Toxin, Frances Marks New Rochelle, N.Y. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1978

146 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982 CLASS OF 1983

Tong, Dominic Jun Fai Honolulu, Hawaii B.S., Hawaii (Monoa), 1978

Usatine, Richard Philip Nanuet, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1978

Veenema, Kenneth Roy Glenrock, N.J. B.S., Cornell, 1977

Vita, Joseph Andrew Katonah, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Wasserman, Hal Stuart Springfield, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Wellisz, Tadeusz Zbigniew New York, N.Y. B.A., Chicago, 1977

Whelan, Richard Lawrence Franklin Square, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1978

Wolff, David Marc New York, N.Y. B.S., SUN Y (Albany), 1977

Wolfson, Steven Jay Valley Stream, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Yorke, Eric Robert Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., SUN Y (Stony Brook), 1978

Zeralsky, Sandra Joan Pearl River, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978

Student Roster: Class of 1983

Alonso, Jose Jr. Astoria, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Andersen, Rolf Leon Suffern, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Arliss, Jeffrey James Locust, N.J. B.S., Vermont, 1978

Bar, Michael Henry New York, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1979

Baran, Syma Deborah Levittown, N.Y. B. A., Barnard, 1979

Bass, AUyson Brackett Oakland, Calif. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1975

Bauer, R. David Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Beck, Marc Lloyd New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Ben-Zvi, Jeffrey S. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1979

Black, Alexander Charlton Wellesley, Mass. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Bobella, Stephen Kurt Hackensack, N.J. B.A., Drew, 1979

Bonner, Matthew Kip Georgetown, Conn. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Boos, Stephen Charles Huntington Sta., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of

Technology, 1979 Breidbart, Scott Eric Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976 Brill, David Alan New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Bush, James William Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1979 Cahill, Peter duPont Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979 Camacho, Victor Emanuel Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979 Camerino, Vicki Jean Larchmont, N.Y. B. A., Dartmouth, 1978 Carpenter, Richard Owen Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.S., Duke, 1979 Caselli, Richard John Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Chalfin, Laura B. New York, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1970 Chen, William Kuang-Yu New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Christopher, Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Chu, Thomas Gerald Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979 Davidson, Peter Killip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1977 Davitz, Michael Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978 Desser, Terry Susan Beechhurst, N.Y. B. A., Princeton, 1979

Dillon, John Joseph Yorktown Hts., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy, 1978 Donnenberg, Michael Seth Levittown, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1979 Drooker, Martin Allen Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979 Duralde, Xavier A. East Point, Ga. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Dushay, Kevin Maier Fayetteville, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979 Eaton, Bradford Hunter Pelham, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Emanuel, Guy Mac Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1979 Erly, William Kenneth Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Haverford, 1978 Eskenazi, Loren Beth New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Feind, Carl Robert Alpine, N.J. B.S., Antioch, 1979 Feldmann, Edward Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. B.A., Cornell, 1979

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983 147

Felix, Alan David New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1979

Fiorito, Joseph John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Fisher, Margaret Elizabeth Haddonfield, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Florakis, George James Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Freilich, David Ira Brooklyn, N.Y. Brooklyn College

Friedman, David Paul Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Gaines, Alan David Randolph, Mass. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1979 Garbowit, David Labe Pittsfield, Mass. B.S., Union, 1979 Genecin, Paul Baltimore, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1977 Glatt, Aaron Eli Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1979 Gliedman, Paul R. Wallkill, N.Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1979 Goldberg, Neal Benjamin Hartsdale, N.Y. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1979 Goldman, Myla P. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979 Goldstein, Michael D. Smithtown, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979 Gomez, Yvonne Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Gonzalez, Christopher Lewis Claremont, Calif. B.A., Pitzer, 1979 Gonzalez, Victoria Mary Claremont, Calif. B.A., California State (San Francisco),

1979 Green, Nancy Sue Wabon, Mass. B.S., Tufts, 1979 Gutowski, Teddy Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1979 Hanau, Lawrence Huto Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Hildreth, James Earl Camden, Ark. B. A., Harvard, 1979 Holland, Steven Matthew Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., St. John's, 1979 Ingram, David Lloyd Somerset, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Jaffe, Mark D. Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Johnston, Maria Milagros Bergenfield, N.J. B.A., Barnard, 1979 Jones, Leon D. Rome, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Kalb, Thomas Heller Palm Beach, Fla. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Kamer, Russell Scott New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1979 Kaplan, Sondra Denise New York, N.Y. B.S., Lehman, 1978 Karas, Steven Peter Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Kastelman, James Steven Cranford, N.J. B.S., Princeton, 1979 Keller, Wendy A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1975 Klapper, Robert C. Far Rockaway, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Koehler, Susan Ellen Clarence, N.Y. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1979 Konecky, Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979 Kriger, Alberto Isaac Rio Piedras, P.R. B.A., Brandeis, 1979 Landry, Donald William Cambridge, Mass. B.S., Lafayette, 1975 Landzberg, Joel Serge Whitestone, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Lederman, Seth Michael New York, N.Y. B. A., Princeton, 1979 Letsou, George Vasilios Lowell, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Linfield, Louis S. II San Francisco, Calif. B.A., Harvard, 1977 Loomis, Karen Jay White Plains, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977 Lopez, Rafael Roberto New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Luppescu, Neal Edwin Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Lustick, Martin Ross Watertown, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978 Lytton, William Winzer Scarsdale, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1978 McCord, Mary Marshall New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1978

Macfarlane, Michael Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Long Island (C. W. Post), 1975 Mandel, Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Manley, John C. North Port, N.Y. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1977 Matathias, Daniel J. Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Matos, Sergio E. New York, N.Y. B.S., City College of New York, 1979 Melfi, Robert Joseph Wood-Ridge, N.J. B.S., Creighton, 1979 Muello, Karin Ann New York, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1973 Munro, Virginia Schaefer New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979

148 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983

Neuberg, Gerald Walter Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Okun, Alexander Lawrence New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Ostrow, Steven Mark Baldwin, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979

Paek, In-Bok Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Pastor, Patricia Camuto Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1976

Perkins, Archibald Simon Williamstown, Mass. B. A., Williams, 1979

Perlmutter, Jeffrey Alan Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Peterson, Mark William Fort Collins, Colorado B.S., Colorado State, 1979

Petko, Lawrence Joseph Succasunna, N.J. B.A., Chicago, 1979

Phillips, Bruce A. Newton, Mass. B.A., Wesleyan, 1978

Pierson, Richard Norris III Englewood, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1978

Pollak, Emil Martin Jr. Old Tappan, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Pollak, Jeffrey Scott New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Quinn, Thomas Joseph Wantagh, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979

Rampil, Ira Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.E.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1975

Randolph, Paula Ann Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Readling, Maris Anne Oswego, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1979

Retikas, Anthony Demetrios Akron, Ohio B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1979

Rice, Louis Bernard Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Rich, Thomas Jonathan Flourtown, Pa. B.S., Bucknell, 1979

Ring, Wendy Susan Coral Gables, Fla. B.S., Yale, 1979

Roberts, William Gary Purchase, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Rochester, Carolyn Lee Charlottesville, Va. B.A., Smith, 1979

Rosenthal, Jonathan Harry New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1973

Sacks, Andrew Jay New York, N.Y. B.A., New College, 1975

Saiman, Lisa Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977

Saver, Barry Gordon Cambridge, Mass. B.S., Yale, 1976

Schlesinger, Gail Michele Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Schoifet, Scott David Somerset, N.J. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Seldin, David Gary Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Sentochnik, Deborah E. Fort Plain, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Shapiro, Matthew Scott Hewlett, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Simpson, Joseph Brooklyn, N.Y. B. A., Brooklyn (CUNY), 1979

Smires, Harvey Edward Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Smith, Ann Elizabeth Northport, N.Y. B. A., Washington, 1979

Spriegel, John Roberts Evanston, 111. B.S.E., Princeton, 1979

Starin, Lawrence Robert Spring Valley, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1979

Takeshita, Kenichi Newark, Del. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Tannenbaum, Gary Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Vagelos, Randall Herodotus Watchung, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Van de Wiele, Barbara M. Alpine, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1977

Wang, Paul Johnson Indianapolis, Ind. B. A., Harvard, 1979

Wang, Timothy Cragin St. Louis, Mo. B.A., Williams, 1979

Wasserman, Marcia Sue Syosset, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1973

Weinberger, Michael Laurence Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Weinstein, Lee Scott Woodmere, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1979 Weissman, Jane Lisa New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1977 Whitley, Barbara Ellen Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Syracuse, 1971 Widom, Barbara Santa Cruz, Calif. B.A., Cornell, 1979 Wilkins, James Burton Toledo, Ohio B.S., Ohio State, 1979 Wilner, Philip Jonathan Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Wimpfheimer, Miriam Jane New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1975 Winter, Eric Herbert New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Young, David Ming Stoatsburg, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Yu, Leonard Tobey New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977 Zigelman, Charles Z. Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Queens (CUNY), 1979

Index

Absence, leave of, 42

Academic discipline: see Regulations

Academic year: calendar, 3-4; divisions, 43

Administration: Joint Administrative Board, 7; staff, 8

Admission(s): Committee on, 7, 25-26; application procedure, 25-26; require- ments, 25, 26; application fee, 25, 28; to advanced standing, 26; of foreign students, 26

Administrative staff, 8

Advanced standing, 26

Advisory Committee to the Dean, Chair- men's, 6

Affiliated hospitals, 14-16, 21-23

Alpha Omega Alpha, 40

Alumni Association, 41

Anatomy: courses, 44; officers of instruc- tion, 54-55

Anesthesiology: course, 45; officers of instruction, 55-58

Application for degrees, 3-4, 29; for admission, 25-26; fees, 25; for financial aid, 30-31

Attendance, 27

Auditing courses, 27

Augustus Long Library, 17, 19

Awards, 38-40, 51

Bard Hall, 12, 30

Bard Haven Towers, 13, 30

Bassett, Mary Imogene, Hospital, 15, 22

Biochemistry: course, 44; officers of

instruction, 58-59 Biology: abnormal human, course, 43 Biophysics and biophysical chemistry,

special program in, 50 Biostatistics, officers of instruction, 112-

13

Calendar, Academic, 3-4

Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Re- search, 19-20

Center for Community Health Systems, 20

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research. 49

Certificates: in physical therapy, 48; in

psychoanalysis, 49 Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the

Dean, 6 Clinical genetics, special program in, 49 College of Physicians and Surgeons:

history, purpose, and location, 18-19;

program of instruction, 42-52 Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center,

11, 18-21 Columbia University: relation to P&S,

history, 18-19; library, 19; campus

facilities, 40 Conduct, 27

Course numbers, key to, 43 Courses: summary of curriculum, 43;

basic science and introductory clinical,

43-45; major clinical year, 45-47;

electives, 42; for practicing physicians

and specialists, 52 Curriculum: Committee on, 7; summary

of, 43

Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, 5 Degrees: application dates, 3-4, 29 dates of award, 3-4; M.S., 48, 49 M.D., 18, 47-48; Med. Sc.D., 52, 53 Ph.D., 47-48; 49, 50; see also Certifi- cates; National Board examinations Dental and Oral Surgery, School of, 19 Departments of Instruction, 54-133 Dermatology: course, 45; officers of

instruction, 59-61 Discipline, academic: see Regulations Doctor of Medical Science degree, 52, 53 Doctor of Medicine degree, 18; in combi- nation with M.P.H. degree, 48; in combination with Ph.D. degree, 47-48 Doctor of Philosophy degree; in combina- tion with M.D. degree, 47-48; in nutri- tion, 49; in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, 50 Dormitories, 30

Emeriti officers, 8-10 Employment for spouses of students, 31 Endowed lectureships, 50-51 Endowed scholarship funds, 31-36

150 INDEX

Environmental Health Sciences, officers of instruction, 113

Epidemiology, officers of instruction, 113-14

Equipment: estimated cost of, 30; require- ment 30

Executive Committee of the Faculty Council, 5

Expenses, estimated, 30; see also Fees

Faculty Council: Executive Committee of the, 5; of the Faculty of Medicine, 5-6

Faculty of Medicine, 5-10

Fees: payment of, 3; application, 25, 28; health service and hospital insurance, 28; late, 28; withdrawal and adjustment of, 28-29; see also Expenses, esti- mated

Financial aid, 30-40

Foreign students: admission of, 26; loans to, 36

General Education, University Program of, 50

Genetics: see Human Genetics and Devel- opment

Gift funds, 36

Grades and promotions, 42-43

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences: relation to P&S, 47-48

Gynecology: see Obstetrics and Gynecol- ogy

Harlem Hospital Center, 14, 22

Health Administration: officers of instruc- tion, 115-16

Health service, 28

Helen Hayes Hospital, 16, 22

History of the College and the University, 18-19

Hospitals, teaching, 14-16, 21-23

Housing, 30

Human Genetics and Development: course, 44; officers of instruction, 61- 62

Human nutrition, 20

Institute of Cancer Research, 19-20 Institute of Human Nutrition, 20 International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction, 20-21

Joint Administrative Board, 7

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center Augustus Long Li- brary, 17, 19

Key to course numbers, 43

Leaves of absence, 42-43 Lectureships, endowed, 50-51 Libraries: Health Sciences, 17, 19;

University, 19, 40 Loans, 36-38

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, 15, 22

Master of Science degree: in human nutri- tion, 49; in occupational therapy, 48

Medical service to students, 28

Medicine: courses, 44, 45, 46; officers of instruction, 62-71

Microbiology: course, 44; officers of instruction, 71-72

Microscopes, 30

National Board examinations, 43

Neurological Surgery, officers of instruc- tion, 73

Neurology: teaching hospital, 21; courses, 46; officers of instruction, 74-77

Nondiscriminatory policies, statement of, 24-25

Nursing, School of, 19

Nutrition: course, 44; special programs in, 49; see also Institute of Human Nutri- tion

Obstetrics and Gynecology: teaching hos- pital, 21; course, 46; officers of instruc- tion, 77-81

Occupational therapy, see Physical Ther- apy; Master of Science degree

Ophthalmology: teaching hospital, 21; officers of instruction, 81-84

Orthopedic Surgery: teaching hospital, 21; course, 46; officers of instruction, 84-86

Otolaryngology: course, 46; officers of instruction, 86-88

Overlook Hospital, 16, 22-23

P&S Club, 40

Pathology: courses, 44; officers of instruc- tion, 88-93

INDEX 151

Pediatrics: teaching hospital, 21; course, 47; officers of instruction, 93-100

Pharmacology: course, 45; officers of instruction, 100-101

Physical therapy and occupational thera- py, special programs in, 48; see also Rehabilitation Medicine

Physicians and Surgeons: see College of Physicians and Surgeons

Physiology: courses, 44, 45; officers of instruction, 101-2

Population and Family Health, officers of instruction, 116-17

Postgraduate Programs, 52-53

Presbyterian Hospital, 7, 21

President of the University, 5

Prizes, 38-40, 51

Program of instruction for the M.D. degree, 42; summary of curriculum, 43

Programs, postgraduate, 52-53

Programs, special: for the Ph.D. degree, 47-50; in physical therapy and occupa- tional therapy, 48; in psychoanalytic medicine, 49; in nutrition, 49; in biophy- sics and biophysical chemistry, 50; in clinical genetics, 49-50

Promotions, grades and, 42-43

Psychiatric Institute, New York State, 19, 23

Psychiatry: teaching hospital, 21; courses, 45, 47; officers of instruction, 102-12

Psychoanalytic Training and Research, Center for, special programs, 49

Public Health: courses, 45; officers of instruction, 112-19; School of, 19

Residence halls, 30 Roosevelt Hospital, 15, 23

St. Luke's Hospital, 14, 23

Scholarships, 31-36

Seminar, General Education, 50

Sociomedical Sciences, officers of instruc- tion, 117-18

Specialization: programs for, 47-50; post- graduate, 52-53

Statement of nondiscriminatory policies, 24-25

Students: selection of, 25-26; medical service to, 28; financial aid, 30-40; housing, 30; activities, 40

Students, roster of: internship placement, Class of 1979, 134-37; Class of 1980, 137-40; Class of 1981, 140-43; Class of 1982, 143-46; Class of 1983, 146- 48

Surgery: courses, 47; officers of instruc- tion, 126-31

Teaching hospitals, 14-16, 21-23

Teaching staff of the departments: see under names of departments

Transcripts, 29

Tropical medicine: officers of instruction, 118

Tuition, 28; refund of, 29

University Program of General Education,

50 University Rights, Reservation of, 18 University Senate delegates, 7 Urology: teaching hospital, 21; course, 47;

officers of instruction, 131-33

Radiology: courses, 47; officers of instruc- tion, 120-23

Readmission, 42-43

Registration, 26; dates, 3; late, 28

Regulations, University, 26

Rehabilitation Medicine: course, 47; offi- cers of instruction, 123-26

Religious holidays and attendance, 27

Research: cancer, 19-20; in human reproduction, 20-21; in nutrition, 20, 49; in clinical genetics, 49-50

Vice President for Health Sciences, 5 Visiting professorship, 50-51

Washington Heights Health and Teaching

Center, 19 William Black Medical Research Center,

20 Withdrawal and adjustment of fees, 28-

29

House number: 9533-301

The Morningside Campus & Environs

West 123rd Street

Jewish Theological Seminary

West 122nd Street

Corpus Christi Church

West 121st Street

Macy Teachers College

West 120th Street

West 1 19th Street

Helen Millicent Giodhart Mclntosl / Itschul Center

Pupin

Marcellus Hartley Dodge Physical Fitness Center

Grant Sarasota Bancroft The Fairholm

Grace Dodge

Seeley W Mudd Engineering Terrace

Chandler ||^» Havemeyer

Mathematics

Low

Memorial

Library

.Sherman Fairchild Center

Schermerhom Ext jS Schermerhorn

St Paul's Chapel East Hall

Dodge

423

Butler Hall

West 118th Street

West 116th Street

620 616 Casa 600 Hispdnica

W lodbridge

gl7 ParltingLot

West 115th Street

St. Hilda's and ^\^ ^t. Hugh's School '*'^'^"

Broadway Presbyter an Church

Info. & Visitor Sei

College Walk

Ferris Booth Carman

Butler Library

Harkness Theatfe

Hamilton Hartley

Lh^ingston

ntoHeaitli

John Jay

International Affairs

'-^* Johnson

West 116th Street

1121-25 Post Office

West 115th Street

Woman's Hospital

Notre Dame Church Eli White

George Barry Ford

West 114th Street

Hogan 540

Ruggles

Robert Watt

St Luke's Hospital

West 113th Street

McBain

Armstrong

4/79

West 112th Street

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center Columbia University

n r^

IND8TH AV IRTNO 1 LOCAL SUBWAY STATION

WES T 167TH STREET

11 Alumni Auditorium

3 Augustus Long Library 8 Dana W. Atchley Pavilion 18 The Babies Hospital 21 Babies Hospital

Research, Teaching, and Office Addition

2 Bard Hall Medical Student Residence

1 Bard Haven Towers

10 William Black Medical

Research Building

3 Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research

24 Central Service Building

12 College of Physicians and Surgeons

26 Center for Community Health Systems

13 School of Dental and Oral Surgery 9 Georgian Nurses Residence

22 Edward S. Harkness Eye Institute

23 Eye Institute Research Laboratories

7 Harkness Memorial Hall 16 Harkness Pavilion 20 Pauline A. Hartford Memorial Chapel 3 Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center 3 Institute of Human Nutrition 2/12 International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction

6 Anna C. Maxwell Hall, School of Nursing Residence

5 The Neurological Institute of New York

6 School of Nursing 25 Parking facilities

17 Presbyterian Hospital New York Orthopedic

Hospital Sloane Hospital for

Women Squier Urological Clinic 4 New York State

Psychiatric Institute 4 Psychoanalytic Clinic 15 School of Public Health 19 Radiotherapy Center

13 Vanderbilt Clinic

14 Vanderbilt Clinic Addition

The Faculty of Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS

Columbia University

Bulletin

1980-1981

Inquiries

POST OFFICE ADDRESS:

College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

TELEPHONE INQUIRIES:

Office of Admissions: (Area code 212) 694-3596 Office of Financial Aid: (area code 212) 694-4100

OTHER BULLETINS OF THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE:

Human Nutrition

Nursing (including the Graduate Programs in Maternity Nursing, Psychiatric -

Community Mental Health Nursing, and Pediatric Nursing) Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Continuing Education in the Health Sciences: Postgraduate Courses Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research Public Health

The Faculty of Medicine College of Physicians & Surgeons

Columbia University Bulletin

1980-1981

Contents

Academic Calendar 3

Faculty of Medicine 5

College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals 18

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid 26

Application for Admission, 26. Registration, 27. Regulations, 27. Auditing Courses, 28. Fees, 29. Application for a Degree, 30. Requests for Transcripts, 31. Estimated Expenses, 31. Housing, 32. Financial Aid, 32. Student and Alumni Activities, 41.

Program of Instruction 43

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence, 43. Key to Course Numbers, 44. Summary of Curriculum, 44. Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses, 44. Major Clinical Year, 46. Fourth Year, 49. Special Programs, 49. University Program of General Education, 51. Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship, 52. Prizes and Awards, 52.

Postgraduate Programs 53

Departments of Instruction 55

Anatomy, 55. Anesthesiology, 56. Biochemistry, 59. Dermatology, 60. Human Genetics and Development, 62. Medicine, 63. Microbiology, 73. Neurological Surgery, 75. Neurology, 76. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 79. Ophthalmology, 83. Orthopedic Surgery, 86. Otolaryngology, 89. Pathology, 90. Pediatrics, 96. Pharmacology, 103. Physiology, 104. Psychiatry, 105. Public Health, 116. Radiology, 123. Rehabilitation Medicine, 127. Surgery, 129. Urology, 134.

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1980 137

Student Roster 140

Index 152

Academic Calendar, 1980-1981

Major Religious Holidays

For a statement of University policy on absence for the observance of religious holidays see Admission, Registration, and Expenses Attendance.

JUNE

23-27 Monday-Friday.* Registration for fourth-year students.

23 Monday, through July 3, Thursday.* Registration for third-year students.

JULY

1 Tuesday. Academic year begins for fourth-year students.

4 Friday. Independence Day. Holiday for fourth-year students.

7 Monday. Major Clinical Year begins for third-year students.

AUGUST

1 Friday. t Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in October (see September 4).

18-22 Monday-Friday. Optional early registration for second-year students.

28 Thursday.* Registration for first-year students.

29 Friday.* Registration for second-year students.

SEPTEMBER

1 Monday. Labor Day. Holiday for third- and fourth-year students.

2 Tuesday. Academic year begins for first- and second-year students.

4 Thursday. Last day to file late applications for October degrees.

OCTOBER

22 Wednesday. Award of October degrees.

31 Friday. t Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in January (see December 5).

NOVEMBER

4 Tuesday. Election Day. Holiday for first- and second-year students.

27-28 Thursday-Friday. Thanksgiving holidays for first-, second-, and third-year students.

DECEMBER

5 Friday. Last day to file late applications for January degrees.

20 Saturday, through January 4, 1981, Sunday. Vacation for first-, second-, and third-year students.

'Students allowed to register after the period specified must pay a late fee. fStudents who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

4 ACADEMIC CALENDAR

JANUARY

9 Friday. First semester ends for first-year students.

12 Monday. Second semester begins for first-year students.

21 Wednesday. Award of January degrees.

FEBRUARY

16 Monday. Washington's Birthday. Holiday for first- and second-year

students.

16 Monday.* Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in May (see March 30).

MARCH

21 Saturday, through March 29, Sunday. Vacation for second-year

students.

30 Monday. Last day to file late applications for May degrees.

APRIL

7-8 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Boards Part II for students failing

September 23-24 exam.

29 Wednesday. Dean's Day for Medical Student Research.

MAY

13 Wednesday. Columbia University Commencement and Convocation of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

25 Monday. Memorial Day. Holiday for first-, second-, and third-year stu- dents.

30 Saturday, through June 10, Wednesday. Study period for second-year students.

JUNE

5 Friday. Second semester ends for first-year students.

9-10 Tuesday- Wednesday. National Boards Part I for second-year students.

1 1 Thursday, through July 5, Sunday. Vacation for second-year students.

19 Major Clinical Year concludes for third-year students.

JULY

1 Elective curriculum begins for third-year students.

6 Major Clinical Year begins for second-year students.

Dates of National Board Exams

Part I September 3-4, 1980. Not given at P&S.

June 9-10, 1981. Required by P&S.

Part II September 23-24, 1980. Required by P&S.

April 7-8, 1981. Not given at P&S.

'Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

The Faculty of Medicine

MICHAEL I. SOVERN, LL.B., LL.D. President of the University

HENRIK H. BENDIXEN, M.D. Acting Provost of the University; Acting Vice Presi- dent for Health Sciences

PETER LIKINS, Ph.D. Provost of the University

FRITZ R. STERN, Ph.D. Provost of the University

DONALD F. TAPLEY, M.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine

FREDERICK B. PUTNEY, Ph.D. Deputy Vice President for Health Sciences Adminis- tration

JOHN A. FIORILLO, M.A. Assistant Vice President for Health Sciences Administra- tion

BERNARD D. CHALLENOR, M.D. Associate Dean for Hospital Affairs and Acting Associate Dean for Public Health

HELEN F. PETTIT, M.A. Associate Dean (Nursing)

JOSE M. FERRER, M.D. Associate Dean for Postgraduate Education

FREDERICK G. HOFMANN, Ph.D. Associate Dean for Admissions

LINDA D. LEWIS, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs

THOMAS Q. MORRIS, M.D. Associate Dean for Academic Affairs

NORMAN E. TOY, D.B.A. Associate Dean for Administrative Affairs

PAUL MCLOUGHLIN, M.B.A. Assistant Dean for Administrative Affairs

DOROTHY ESTES, M.D. Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs

LESTER M. GELLER, M.D. Assistant Dean for Student and Curricular Affairs

INEZ E. KLINCK, B.A. Assistant Dean for Academic Administration

JOANNE STEPHAN, Sc.D. Director of Allied Health Programs

Executive Committee of the Faculty Council

Donald F. Tapley (chairman) Glenda J. Garvey Elizabeth A. Mahoney

Henrik H. Bendixen Harold S. Ginsberg Henry M. Spotnitz

William J. Casarella Sylvia P. Griffiths Francis G. Symonds, Jr.

Bernard D. Challenor Douglas N. Ishii

Isidore S. Edelman Donald S. Kornfeld

6 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

Faculty Council of the Faculty of Medicine

Maxwell Abramson Ronald A. Andree Ernest W. April 'Charles A. Ashley Endre A. Balazs Arthur Bank Ellen R. Batt 'Patricia Battin Henrik H. Bendixen Michael Bernstein Thomas J. Bigger, Jr. Louis S. Blancato Martin Blank Arthur D. Bloom 'Thomas A. Blumenfeld Stanley B. Braham Whitley A. Branwood Marjorie A. Bredice Peter R. B. Caldwell Charles J. Campbell 'Robert E. Canfield William J. Casarella Bernard D. Challenor Noreen C. Clark Herbert I. Cohen James W. Correll William J. Davis John R. Denton 'Thomas P. Dillon John A. Downey Richard G. Druss I. S. Edelman Jack Eisert Dean L. Engelhardt Dorothy Estes Philip Feigelson Frieda Feldman Charles Felton Michel J. Ferin 'Jose M. Ferrer Mieczyslaw Finster 'John Fiorillo 'Lee R. Frazier 'Gary Gambuti Alexander Garcia

Glenda Garvey Margerite J. Gates Michael D. Gershon Harold S. Ginsberg Allen M. Gold Fred Goldman DeWitt S. Goodman Reba M. Goodman Ashby S. Grantham Lowell M. Greenbaum Carolyn P. Greenberg Sylvia P. Griffiths Barry J. Gurland 'Lloyd A. Hamilton, Jr. Holger H. Hansen Ronald L. Hanson Leonard C. Harber Brian F. Hoffman 'Frederick G. Hofmann 'Frank E. laquinta Douglas N. Ishii Jerome H. Jaffe Georgiana M. Jagiello Alfred Jaretzki III Raphael Jewelewicz Philip M. Johnson Ira S. Jones Virginia Kanick Arthur Karlin Michael Katz Anne E. Kellett Lucie S. Kelly Donald W. King Thomas C. King 'Inez E. Klinck Abbie L Knowlton Robert S. Krooth John K. Lattimer Mary M. L. Lee Richard U. Levine Paul Lo Gerfo William J. McGill 'Roger W. MacMillan Paul A. Marks Jost W. Michelsen

'Frank V. Mignogna Orlando Miller 'William F. Minogue Thomas Q. Morris Stanley J. Myers Martin Nash Robert S. Neuwirth Eladio Nunez Elliott F. Osserman Audrey S. Penn James M. Perel Benvenuto Pernis 'Ann S. Peterson Helen F. Pettit 'James A. Pierce Jane Pitt Peter J. Puchner 'Frederick B. Putney 'Robin Rankow Maurice M. Rapport Keith Reemtsma 'Richard A. Rifkind Michael R. Rosen Stephen Rosenberg John Rosenberger John Ross Lewis P. Rowland 'Mae Rudolph 'Charles T. Ryder Edward J. Sachar David Schachter Edward B. Schlesinger William B. Seaman Michael L. Sheehy Fred Silva Anneliese L. Sitarz Michael L Severn Abraham Spector 'Sol Spiegelman Henry Spotnitz 'Mervyn W. Susser Francis C. Symonds, Jr. John V. Taggart Donald F. Tapley 'Joseph V. Terenzio

'Nonvoting participant

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 7

'Gerald E. Thomson Juergen Tonndorf *Norman E. Toy Patricia Tretter Gerard M. Turino Raymond L. Vande Wiele Robert Walther

Dorothy Warburton Lucy Warren Harvey J. Weiss 'Robert J. Weiss Arthur P. Wertheim Doris L. Wethers 'Walter A. Wichern, Jr.

Philip D. Wiedel Joachim Wigger Alexander H. Williams 'Myron Winick Charles S. Young Earl A. Zimmerman

Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the Dean

Donald F. Tapley (chairman) Maxwell Abramson Charles A. Ashley Henrik Bendixen Donald A. Bradley Charles J. Campbell Robert E. Canfield Bernard D. Challenor John A. Downey Isidore S. Edelman Dorothy Estes Jose M. Ferrer John Fiorillo Allan Formicola Gary Gambuti Alexander Garcia Michael Gershon

Harold S. Ginsberg Rachel Goldstein Leonard Harber Robert E. Heinlein Brian F. Hoffman Frederick Hofmann Michael Katz Donald W. King Linda Lewis Paul McLoughlin William F. Minogue Thomas S. Morris Edward S. Noroian Carl Olsson Helen Pettit Frederick B. Putney Keith Reemtsma Rodolfo Reyes

Richard A. Rifkind Lewis P. Rowland Charles T. Ryder Edward J. Sachar Edward B. Schlesinger William B. Seaman Philip J. Sharkey Sol Spiegelman Mervyn Susser John V. Taggart Norman E. Toy Raymond L. Vande Wiele Stephen F. Wang Robert J. Weiss Alexander H. Williams Myron Winick

Committees

ADMISSIONS: Associate Dean Hofmann (chairman); Professors Bell, Braham, Bran- wood, Brust, Donn, Downey, Dunton, Frantz, Gambino, Grantham, Grossbard, Harvey, Housepian, Jagiello, Jewett, Linda Lewis (ex officio), Moore, Neuberg, Ortiz-Neu, Pierson, Schachter (ex officio), Silverstein, Jeanne A. Smith, Spotnitz, Jeffrey A. Stein, Taggart, Dean Tapley (ex officio), Thornhill; Peter Small, John Markowitz, and Eric Winter (students).

CURRICULUM: Dr. Thomas Q. Morris (chairman); Professors Abramson, Bernstein, Bendixen, Branwood, Cain, Despommier, Dick, Fine, Garvey, Geller, Gershon, Gins- berg, Brian Hoffman, Legato, Maxman, Nicholson, Nocenti, Puchner, Rosenberg, Spotnitz, Wiedel, and Marianne Wolff; C. Lee Jones (ex officio) and Mitchell Schorow (ex officio); George Arzeno, Leslie Davidson, Ralph Boucher, Noel DeFelippo, Lisa DeAngelis, Paul Dolinsky, Khether Raby, Gary Sobelson (students).

POSTGRADUATE INSTRUCTION: Associate Dean Jose M. Ferrer (chairman); Profes- sors Christy, Goldsmith, Herter, Malitz, Morgan, Ryder, Taggart, Gerald, Gerald E. Thomson, Alexander W. Young, Dean Tapley (ex officio).

'Nonvoting participant

8 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

Delegates to the University Senate

Jennifer J. Bell, Leonard Brand, Edgar M. Housepian, Donald W. King, Thomas C. King, Patricia K. Tretter, Marianne Wolf, and two student delegates.

'Joint Administrative Board

REPRESENTING COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: Katherine L. Auchincloss, Daniel F. Crowley, Carl W. Desch, Arthur B. Krim, Robert D. Lilley, Walsh McDermott, William J. McGill, and W. Clarke Wescoe

REPRESENTING PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL: John W. Brooks, Thomas H. Choate, George S. Dillon, Ralph F. Leach, Sidney J. Weinberg, Jr., Myles V. Whalen, Jr., and Robert Winthrop

Administrative Staff

JOYCE STICHMAN, B.S. Assistant to the Vice President for Health Sciences MARY J. SULLIVAN, B.A. Assistant to the Dean BERNIS D. MOSS, Jr., M.S. Business Officer SHEILA BRENNEN, B.S. Financial Aid Officer JOAN BENNIS. Director of the Office of Admissions

Officers Emeriti

HENRY ARANOW, Jr. Lambert Professor Emeritus of Medicine DANA W. ATCHLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine VIOLA BERNARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry STANLEY BRADLEY. Bard Professor Emeritus of Medicine HAROLD W. BROWN. Professor Emeritus of Parasitology GORDON M. BRUCE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology LESTER C AHN . Professor Emeritus of Oral Pa thology MARY E. CALLAHAN. Professor Emeritus of Physical Therapy ARTHUR CARR. Professor Emeritus of Medical Psychology SIDNEY CARTER. Professor Emeritus of Neurology and of Pediatrics ERWIN CHARGAFF. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry JOHN J. CONLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology WILFRED M. COPENHAVER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy ANDRE F. COURNAND. Professor Emeritus of Medicine DAVID COWEN. Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 9

GEORGE F. CRIKELAIR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

EDWARD C. CURNEN, Jr. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

ROBERT C. DARLING. Simon Baruch Professor Emeritus of Rehabilitation Medicine

ELIZABETH B. DAVIS. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry

D. ANTHONY D'ESOPO. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

A. GERARD DeVOE. Harkness Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

ZACH ARIAS DISCHE . Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

HERBERT O. ELFTMAN. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

JOSE M. FERRER, JR. Professor Emeritus of Surgery

JOHN W. FERTIG. Professor Emeritus of Biostatistics

THOMAS D. FLEMING. Professor Emeritus of Library Science

CHARLES A. FLOOD. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

GOODWIN L. FOSTER. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

CHARLES L. FOX, Jr. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology (in Surgery)

ELIZABETH S. GILL. Professor Emeritus of Nursing

LEONARD J. GOLDWATER. Professor Emeritus of Occupational Medicine

HARRY GRUNDFEST. Professor Emeritus of Neurology

RUTH J. GUTTMANN. Professor Emeritus of Radiology

CUSHMAN D. HAAGENSEN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

MICHAEL HEIDELBERGER. Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry

PAUL F. A. HOEFER. Professor Emeritus of Neurology

GEORGE H. HUMPHREYS II. Mott Professor Emeritus of Surgery

HAROLD W. JACOX. Professor Emeritus of Radiology

MAXWELL KARSHAN. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

AARON K ARUSH . Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychia try

FORREST E. KENDALL. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LAWRENCE C. KOLB. Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

RAPHAEL LATTES. Professor Emeritus of Surgical Pathology

JOHN K. LATTIMER. Professor Emeritus of Urology

FERDINAND F. McALLISTER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

RUSTIN McINTOSH. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

RICHARD L. MASLAND. Merritt Professor Emeritus of Neurology

AUBRE MAYN ARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Surgery

10 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

MEYER M. MELICOW. John L. Given Professor Emeritus of Urology

GEORGE R. MERRIAM, JR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

FREDERICK A. METTLER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

KARL MEYER. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LESTER A. MOUNT. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurological Surgery

MARGARET R. MURRAY. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

DAVID N ACHMANSOHN . Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

PHILLIP O. POLATIN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry

J. LAWRENCE POOL. Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery

EDITH H. QUIMBY. Professor Emeritus of Radiology (Physics)

HERBERT RACKOW. Professor Emeritus of Anesthesiology

HARRY M. ROSE. Borne Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

EDWARD B. SCHLESINGER. Byron Stookey Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery

WILLIAM H. SEBRELL, Jr. Williams Professor Emeritus of Nutrition

BEATRICE C. SEEGAL. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

LAWRENCE W. SLOAN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

ALAN DeF. SMITH. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

HAMILTON SOUTH WORTH . Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

WARREN M. SPERRY. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

DAVID SPRINSON . Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LEO SROLE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Social Sciences in Psychiatry

HERBERT C. STOERK. Professor Emeritus of Pathology

FRANK E. STINCHFIELD. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

HOWARD C. TAYLOR, Jr. Rappleye Professor Emeritus of Obstetrics and Gynecology

CARMEN T. VICALE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurology

JULES G. WALTNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology

SHIH-CHUN WANG. Pfeiffer Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology

SIDNEY C. WERNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

SAMUEL M. WISHIK. Professor Emeritus of Public Health (Public Health Practice)

ABNER WOLF. Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

JAMES WOLFF. Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

JOSEPH ZUBIN. Professor Emeritus of Psychology

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center

View of Bard Hall from Riverside Drive

^

Martin Luther King, Jr., Pavilion, Harlem Hospital Center

St. Luke's Hospital Center

Roosevelt Hospital

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Overlook Hospital

Helen Hayes Hospital

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center- Augustus Long Library

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is guided by the principle that medical education is university education. The acquisition of knowledge and skills is important in professional education, but far more vital is a profound understanding of the science, the art, and the ethic within which both knowledge and skill are applied. As a part of Columbia University, the College builds its curriculum, selects its officers of instruction, and marshals its enormous resources of equipment and clinical experience to develop in the student this understanding of medicine. Within the curriculum for the M.D. degree is the fundamental knowledge upon which later specialization is built, and from which the natural bent is discovered toward general or special practice, or toward research, teaching, or administration. The postgraduate programs of the College provide training in the specialties, help the graduate physician to keep abreast of new knowledge, and support the research from which the physician's knowledge develops.

Statement of Nondiscriminatory Policies

The University is required by certain Federal statutes and administrative regulations to publish the following statements:

Consistent with the requirements of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, as amended, and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R., the University does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the conduct or operation of its education programs or activities (including employment therein and admission thereto). Inquiries concerning the application of Title IX and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R. may be referred to the University's Equal Opportunity Office (305 Low Memorial Library, New York, N.Y. 10027, telephone 212-280-5511), or to the Director, Office for Civil Rights (Region II), 26 Federal Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10007.

Columbia University admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the University. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other University-administered programs.

Consistent with the requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and Part 84 of 45 C.F.R., the University does not discriminate on the basis of handicap in admission or access to, or employment in, its programs and activities. Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified handicapped workers.

The University in addition desires to call attention to other laws and regulations that protect employees, students, and applicants.

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin in programs or activities receiving Federal financial assistance. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits employment discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. Executive Order 11246, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin and requires affirmative action to ensure equality of opportunity in all aspects of employment.

The Equal Pay Act of 1963 prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in rates of pay. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended, prohibits discrimina- tion in employment on the basis of age.

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 19

The Columbia University Senate on December 1, 1978, passed a resolution announc- ing its general educational policy on discrimination which reaffirms the University's commitment to nondiscriminatory policies in the above-mentioned categories, as well as its policy not to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.

Section 402 of the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended, prohibits job discrimination and requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment (1) qualified Vietnam era veterans during the first four years after their discharge and (2) qualified disabled veterans throughout their working life if they have a 30 percent or more disability.

The University's Equal Opportunity Office has also been designated to coordinate the University's compliance activities under each of the programs referred to above.

Reservation of University Rights

This bulletin is intended for the guidance of persons applying for or considering application for admission to Columbia University and for the guidance of Columbia students and faculty. The bulletin sets forth in general the manner in which the University intends to proceed with respect to the matters set forth herein, but the University reserves the right to depart without notice from the terms of this bulletin. This bulletin is not intended to be and should not be regarded as a contract between the University and any student or other person.

History of the College and University

Columbia University began as King's College, which was founded in 1754 by royal grant of George II, King of England, "for the Instruction of Youth in the Learned Languages, and the Liberal Arts and Sciences." The American Revolution interrupted its program, but in 1784 it was reopened as Columbia College. In 1912 the title was changed to Columbia University in the City of New York.

King's College organized a medical faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the North American Colonies to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine. The first graduates in medicine from the College were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam, who received the degree of Bachelor of Medicine in May 1769, and that of Doctor of Medicine in May 1770 and May 1771, respectively. Instruction in medicine was given until interrupted by the Revolution and the occupation of New York by the British, which lasted until November 25, 1783. In 1784 instruction was resumed in the academic departments, and in December of the same year the medical faculty was reestablished. In 1814 the medical faculty of Columbia College was merged with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, which had obtained an independent charter in 1807. In 1860, by agreement between the Trustees of the two institutions, the College of Physicians and Surgeons became the Medical Department of Columbia College; from that time on the diplomas of the graduates were signed by the President of Columbia College as well as by the President of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The connection was only a nominal one, however, until 1891, when the college was incorporated as an integral part of the University. Since September 1917, women have been admitted to the College on the same basis as men.

The Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center was opened in the spring of 1928, seven years after the establishment of a permanent alliance between Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital. It consists of the following units: the divisions of the University Faculty of Medicine (the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the School of Nursing, the School of Public Health); the University School of Dental and Oral Surgery; the Presbyterian Hospital and its subdivisions; the New York State Psychiatric Institute; and the Washington Heights Health and Teaching Center.

The Medical Center occupies a plot of land given to Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital by Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness and Mr. Edward S. Harkness. It

20 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

comprises about twenty acres extending from West 165th Street to West 168th Street and from Broadway to Riverside Drive and is readily accessible from all parts of the city. A map of the Medical Center is given on the inside back cover.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is at 630 West 168th Street between Broadway and Fort Washington Avenue in a seventeen-story building, each floor of which connects with the wards and services of the Presbyterian Hospital. The William Black Medical Research Building is a twenty-story building, containing research labora- tories for the faculty members of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. It is connected with the College building and is located at 168th Street and Fort Washington Avenue. The Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, a twenty-story structure diagonally opposite the William Black Medical Research Building, opened its teaching, research, and library facilities in 1976.

Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library

The Columbia University Health Sciences Library is housed in the Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, 701 West 168th Street. The four floors occupied by the library offer a comfortable atmosphere conducive to study, including such amenities as individual study carrels, group study and conference rooms, typing rooms, and a leisure reading lounge.

With more than 360,000 volumes and a staff of 40, the Health Sciences Library is one of the largest medical center libraries in the United States. It is well able to serve the needs of faculty, students, and researchers in the health sciences disciplines. More than 3,000 periodicals are received regularly. An entire floor of the library has been designated as a media center and is equipped with a variety of audiovisual materials. In addition to traditional reference services, the library offers computerized literature searching on several data bases, including MEDLARS. Materials describing library services are available on request.

Other Columbia libraries, located on the Morningside campus, are open to all students and faculty who carry Columbia identification cards. The main collection is housed in Butler Library; special and departmental collections are housed in other buildings on the campus. Columbia students and faculty are also permitted access to the collections of approximately twenty other research institutions including Stanford and Yale Universities, under the auspices of the Research Libraries Group. Information about the Research Libraries Group can be obtained from the Health Sciences Library.

Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research

The Cancer Research Center was established in 1973. In 1977 it was designated the Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research. In 1979 the Center was awarded Comprehensive status by the National Cancer Institute in recognition of its broad responsibility for research, patient care, and cancer control activities. The Center coordinates, integrates, and facilitates cancer research, education, and patient care in the Health Sciences Faculties of Columbia University and its affiliated hospitals in New York City Presbyterian, St. Luke's, Roosevelt, Harlem as well as Overlook in Summit, New Jersey, and Morristown Memorial Hospital in New Jersey. The Cancer Center was organized to effect the efficient and cooperative use of all Center resources, maximize the dissemination of information among Center personnel, and facilitate the rapid translation of cancer research findings into programs for improving capabilities for the prevention of cancer and the care of patients with cancer.

The Institute of Cancer Research of Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, was established in 1911 with funds bequeathed to the University by George Crocker. It moved from its original quarters on 116th Street to the campus of the

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 21

Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in 1938. The Institute and Center are fully Integrated.

The Center is composed of five operational divisions: Basic Science Research, Clinical Research and Patient Care, Education, Cancer Control, and Administration.

Center for Community Health Systems

The Center for Community Health Systems is an interdisciplinary and interdepartmen- tal health services and health policy research and development center which enlists varied resources of the University, particularly those of the Faculty of Medicine and its affiliated hospitals, in a systematic attack on problems in the organization and delivery of health care, with a predominant, though not exclusive, focus on urban areas.

Institute of Human Nutrition

The Institute of Human Nutrition is an interdisciplinary unit whose mission is to study all aspects of nutrition that relate to human health. The Institute is organized into three primary divisions: Growth and Development, Nutrition and Metabolism, and Community Nutrition. Although each division conducts its own research program and offers its own program of instruction, these are highly integrated in order to achieve two basic goals: research in all areas of human nutrition and an integrated teaching program in areas of nutrition relevant to the physician and medical scientist.

To achieve this integration of purpose and at the same time allow for the specializa- tion necessary for the best research and teaching, combined research projects between the divisions are under way, and joint seminars and courses involving faculty and students in all three divisions are conducted. Constant interchange of ideas is fostered through weekly combined staff conferences and special lectures which are open to the medical center community. Through its Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy, and postdoctoral programs, the Institute aims to train individuals for scholarly activities in university and research centers that are in the forefront of the movement to advance nutrition as a health science.

The facilities of the Institute include laboratories in the William Black Medical Research Center, and the Obesity Center and Nutrition and Metabolic Research Center at St. Luke's Hospital Center. The office of the Director and other administrative offices are located on the seventh floor of the Health Sciences Center.

International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction

The International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction was founded in 1965 with a grant from the Ford Foundation. Its primary purpose is to do research in the fields of biology, clinical investigation, and the social sciences relevant to the solution of the world population problem. A parallel objective is to study the many complications of the reproductive process affecting human welfare, such as infertility, endocrine disorder, out-of-wedlock pregnancy, marital and other social problems. The Institute consists of the Center for Reproductive Sciences, including the divisions of reproductive biochemis- try, physiology, and reproductive morphology, and the Center for Population and Family Health, which includes the divisions of social and administrative sciences, family life services, clinical evaluation, and sexual behavior.

The office of the Center for Reproductive Sciences is at 630 West 168th Street, and the office of the Center for Population and Family Health is at Floor B-3, 60 Haven Avenue.

22 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

Affiliated Hospitals

The Presbyterian Hospital

Founded in 1868, the Hospital joined with Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons to form the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, which opened in 1928. Under the terms of the permanent alliance agreement with Columbia University, members of the hospital staff are appointed by the Board of Trustees of the hospital on nomination by the Trustees of the University. The Presbyterian Hospital has an overall capacity of 1,291 beds and 48 bassinets.

The hospital includes all of the individual units described below:

Presbyterian Hospital, the single largest hospital unit, has a total of 480 beds, which includes semiprivate for medical and surgical services, as well as for New York Orthopaedic Hospital, Squier Urological Clinic, and Sloane Hospital for Women.

The New York Orthopaedic Hospital opened as a dispensary in 1866 largely because of the interest taken in the care of the crippled by Theodore Roosevelt, father of the president of the same name. The hospital was located in its own buildings at 420 East 59th Street until December 1950, when it was moved to the fifth floor of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Squier Urological Clinic has facilities on the tenth floor of the Presbyterian Hospital and on the tenth floor of Babies Hospital.

Sloane Hospital for Women was built at West 59th Street and Amsterdam Avenue and presented to Columbia University by Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sloane in 1886. It now occupies two floors of the Presbyterian Hospital and one floor in Harkness Pavilion.

Harkness Pavilion, erected when the Medical Center was established in 1928, is available for the accommodation of private and semiprivate patients from various services.

Babies Hospital, founded in 1887, provides for general medical and surgical care of infants and children up to their late teens, and care for premature babies.

Neurological Institute, one of the first nongovernmental hospitals in the country for the treatment of diseases of the nervous system, was founded in 1909. It moved from East 67th Street to the Medical Center in 1929. The Institute includes facilities added in 1960 for psychiatric patients.

The Edward S. Harkness Eye Institute, opened in 1933, has complete facilities for the medical and surgical treatment of adults and children with diseases of the eye. On January 1, 1940, the work of the Herman Knapp Memorial Eye Hospital was taken over by the Institute.

Vanderbilt Clinic was presented to Columbia University by the Vanderbilt family in 1888 and is the outpatient department for the Presbyterian Hospital.

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital in Cooperstown, New York, is a rural hospital combining the characteristics of a university medical center with a dedication to the delivery of both primary health services to the local community and highly specialized services to a large referral area. The hospital has 186 beds and a staff of specialists who are all salaried and full time. In 1979 there were 116,764 visits to the Outpatient

AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 23

Department. The teaching program for house staff and students is a highly personalized one based on a team approach to medical care. Members of the staff conduct biomedical research and are interested in models for the delivery of health care to the community. The library is unusually extensive for a hospital of this size, with over 23,000 volumes and about 350 subscribed journals. Since 1947 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia, and currently about 60 students from Columbia elect programs at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital.

Harlem Hospital Center

Harlem Hospital Center, founded in 1887, is a general hospital of nearly 1,100 beds serving Central Harlem and environs, responsible for the care of approximately 400,000 people. The College of Physicians and Surgeons, through a contractual arrangement with the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, is responsible for all professional services in this hospital and nominates its entire professional staff.

This affiliation presents a unique opportunity for teaching students, interns, and residents in the traditional disciplines of medicine and provides increasing opportunities for involvement in community medicine.

The Helen Hayes Hospital

The Helen Hayes Hospital at West Haverstraw, New York, founded in 1900, is a 150-bed independent rehabilitation hospital with complete medical services, owned and operated by the state through the New York State Health Department. Since 1966 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia University. The medical specialties and allied health professionals are organized into disability units that provide compre- hensive care through an integrated team approach, providing unique educational opportunities for residents and allied health students. The hospital has 800 admissions and 6,000 outpatient visits a year. New patient facilities are under construction; the research building has been renovated and an active biomedical engineering unit developed.

Morristown Memorial Hospital

Morristown Memorial Hospital is a regional hospital center offering comprehensive health services for the entire family. It is a voluntary, nonprofit institution with a history of community service dating back to 1892. The hospital has become a central health care facility serving Morris, Warren, Sussex, and Somerset counties, and a medical referral center for all of northwest New Jersey. Morristown Memorial is also a teaching hospital, with programs for medical, nursing, and technical staff. It became affiliated with the College of Physicians & Surgeons in 1979. Morristown Memorial, Overlook Hospital in Summit, and St. Barnabas Hospital in Livingston are members of the Shared Services Consortium pioneering regionalized health care services in northern New Jersey. With 689 beds, 1,700 employees, 678 nurses, a medical and dental staff of more than 400, and a full spectrum of basic and highly specialized services, Morristown Memorial combines the traditional advantages of a community hospital with the advanced capabilities of a progressive medical center. The hospital has two divisions: one where the emphasis is on acute care; the other, a center for preadmission testing, geriatric extended care, outpatient and alcoholic services, and planned facilities for subacute and rehabilitative care.

24 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

Overlook Hospital

Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey, is a 540-bed suburban community hospital, founded in 1906, which became a teaching affiliate of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1975. It is a general, voluntary, nonprofit institution accommodating 20,000 inpatients and 100,000 outpatients each year. Overlook offers particularly strong training in family practice and primary care internal medicine and pediatrics through a program of broad-based clinical experience for graduate physi- cians. Outreach programs have been pioneered in alcoholism and other addictive illness, home-care-based hospice, and mobile intensive care utilizing paramedics.

St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

St. Luke's Hospital Center, which has included Woman's Hospital since 1953, merged with The Roosevelt Hospital in 1979, forming a Hospital Center containing 1,363 beds and serving a catchment area spanning Manhattan's west side from 34th to 134th Streets. Both hospitals had maintained teaching affiliations with the College of Physi- cians and Surgeons of Columbia University for many years before 1971, when they each became full University hospitals. Under the terms of the affiliation with Columbia University, new members of the medical staff are appointed by the Hospital Center's Board of Trustees after they have received appointments as officers of instruction at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division

St. Luke's was established in 1850 and has been on Morningside Heights next to the main Columbia campus since 1896. It merged with Woman's Hospital in 1953, and today the hospital complex contains 780 beds, including 45 pediatric beds, 59 obstetric beds, and 50 bassinets. Approximately 24,000 patients are admitted yearly to the four major and eleven specialty services. The attending staff numbers 600 doctors; the house staff consists of 219 residents and fellows.

St. Luke's is recognized as a leader in such fields as heart surgery, kidney transplantation, artificial kidney treatments, and noninvasive diagnosis (ultrasound). The Hospital Center's clinically oriented research projects are involved in such areas as blood diseases, coronary artery disease, gastroenterology, obesity and nutrition (it is the site of the only federally funded obesity research center), pulmonary disease, renal transplant-immunology, and bioengineering. A medical library of 22,000 volumes is an integral part of the Hospital Center. St. Luke's is both a major referral institution and a community hospital. The more than fifty specialty and subspecialty clinics see 50,000 patients yearly (totaling approximately 200,000 visits); the Emergency Room is one of the busiest in Manhattan, with 76,000 visits annually. The Hospital Center also operates extensive community programs in alcoholism treatment, drug detoxification, and mental health.

Roosevelt Hospital Division

The Roosevelt Hospital treated its first patient in 1871. It contains 583 beds and bassinets. There are about 217,000 outpatient and emergency-room visits annually. Approximately 19,000 patients are admitted to this hospital yearly. The hospital is engaged in many research and teaching activities. There are 159 members of the house staff. A new research building containing 52,000 square feet of laboratory space for all departments was opened in 1973. The medical library contains 17,000 volumes and subscribes to 550 medical and technical journals. The hospital is actively engaged in community programs, as represented by its Children and Youth Program and by its

AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 25

Drug Addiction, Alcoholism, and many other outreach and community programs sponsored by the Departments of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, Medicine, and Ambulatory Care.

New York State Psychiatric Institute

The Institute was built and is maintained by the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene. Through a contractual arrangement, it is affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The Institute's functions are to carry out research on the causes and treatment of psychiatric disorders and the education of those entering the mental health field. The Institute currently maintains twelve major research laborato- ries, a hospital, and a number of specialized outpatient departments providing diagnos- tic and treatment facilities.

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid

Entering classes are enrolled in the College in September of each year. The minimum requirement for admission is attendance for three full academic years at an approved college of arts and sciences. Most applicants present four academic years and a bachelor's degree, although these are not required. The composition of our entering classes indicates, however, that only a relatively small number of three-year students have been accepted in the past by our Committee on Admissions.

The college program must have included English, physics, biology, organic chemistry (including at least one semester of laboratory), and some other courses in chemistry covering at least one academic year each. These requirements have been designated as mandatory not only by our faculty but by various state medical licensure boards as well; accordingly, appplicants cannot be excused from them. Courses in genetics and embryology will be useful but are not required. Students applying for admission must also have taken the Medical College Admission Test in the spring or fall of the year of application but only if the test scores will be sent to medical schools in the State of New York; if the scores will not be sent to this school, the requirement will be waived for all applicants. The student may have concentrated in any area in the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, or arts but evidence of a balanced education, as well as demonstrated interest and ability in the natural sciences, is preferred.

Application Procedure

Application for admission must be filed on a special form obtained from the Admissions Office of the Faculty of Medicine. Applications should be submitted as promptly as possible, though they are accepted only for the next incoming class; requests for application forms may be submitted one year in advance of registration. The completed form must be accompanied by the application fee of $25. The fee helps to cover the cost of processing the application; it is therefore not returnable and is not credited toward tuition.

Applicants will be notified when their applications have been received. The Commit- tee on Admissions, however, evaluates only completed applications, that is, those for which letters of recommendation have been received, along with MCAT scores and transcripts. Applicants will be notified, also, when their applications have been completed; if such notification is not received within sixty days after the date of the preliminary processing of an application, applicants should make inquiries at the Admissions Office to learn which items have not yet been received. Failure to receive letters of recommendation and transcripts is the most common cause of delay in the completion of applications.

If a personal interview is required in connection with the application, it will be requested by the Admissions Office.

Selection of Students

The Committee on Admissions devotes months to the task of selecting a class of 148 from a very large number of applicants. Obviously there will be many well-qualified students whom the College will not be able to accept. The Faculty of Medicine recognizes its obligations in the field of medical education and research not only to the local area but to the nation as well. Admission will not be offered to any applicant who has not been interviewed by one of the College's representatives. Impressions from such an interview, as well as scores on the MCAT and academic records, will be considered in selecting individuals for admission. Other selection criteria are listed below.

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 27

The Committee places great importance on the fact that the students have learned to think for themselves, to explore, to work hard under their own initiative, to consider alternatives and make decisions, and to develop a desire for a continuous program of self-education. In the selection of students, preference is given to those who, in the opinion of the Committee on Admissions, have shown high achievement in their college education, a mature sense of values, sound motivation, qualities of leadership, and ability to assume responsibility, and to those who have already given evidence that they are qualified to complete all requirements of our curriculum and to graduate as ethical, compassionate, and competent physicians.

The practice of medicine is both a science and an art, and to treat the patient as a whole person, the doctor must be a whole person. Students planning a career in medicine should be motivated toward becoming leaders in medical thinking, rather than technicians, because medical practice is both a private enterprise and a public responsibility. The liberal arts college offers the opportunity to prepare for a happier and more useful life of citizenship. Years of specialization lie ahead in a professional career, but the foundation of all advanced study is a broad liberal education, of which science is a part.

Admission to Advanced Standing

Only a very small number of vacancies occur during the medical course, and students can be accepted on transfer from other schools only when such vacancies do arise. Any student desiring to transfer from an accredited school of medicine to the upper classes of the College should communicate with the Admissions Office to learn if a vacancy exists.

Admission of Foreign Students

Applicants need not be citizens of this country but preferably should have received their premedical education at an accredited college or university in the United States or Canada. Applications may be submitted by individuals who have been educated elsewhere, but in the past the Committee on Admissions has had great difficulty in finding a satisfactory means of evaluating the caliber of education available in the many colleges and universities throughout the world. Likewise, the Committee will accept applications for admission to this school with advanced standing from individuals who have begun their medical education in schools outside the United States and Canada, but again it has usually been able to admit relatively few individuals either to an entering class or with advanced standing whose previous education has not been obtained in this country or Canada.

Registration

Before attending classes, each student must register in person at the Office of the Registrar during the registration period listed in the Academic Calendar. The Office of the Registrar, on the first floor of the Black Building, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.

All students will be asked to give Social Security numbers when registering in the University. Any who do not now have a number should obtain one from their local Social Security office well in advance of registration.

Regulations

According to University regulations, each person whose registration has been completed will be considered a student of the University during the term for which he or she is

28 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

registered unless the student's connection with the University is officially severed by withdrawal or otherwise. No student registered in any school or college of the University shall at the same time be registered in any other school or college, either of Columbia University or of any other institution, without the specific authorization of the dean or director of the school or college of the University in which he or she is first registered.

The privileges of the University are not available to any student until he or she has completed registration. A student who is not officially registered for a University course may not attend the course unless granted auditing privileges (see below). No student may register after the stated period without the written consent of the appropriate dean or director.

The University reserves the right to withhold the privilege of registration or any other University privilege from any person with unpaid indebtedness to the University.

Conduct

All members of the University community, its visitors and guests, are governed by the Rules of University Conduct, which apply to all demonstrations, including rallies and picketing, that take place on or at a University facility. It is the student's responsibility to be aware of all provisions, regulations, and procedures contained in the Rules. Copies are available in the Office of the University Senate, 406 Low Memorial Library.

Attendance

Students are held accountable for absences incurred owing to late enrollment.

Religious Holidays

It is the policy of the University to respect its members' observance of their major religious holidays. Officers of administration and of instruction responsible for the scheduling of required academic activities or essential services are expected to avoid conflict with such holidays as much as possible. Such activities include examinations, registration, and various deadlines that are a part of the academic calendar.

Where scheduling conflicts prove unavoidable, no student will be penalized for absence for religious reasons, and alternative means will be sought for satisfying the academic requirements involved. If a suitable arrangement cannot be worked out between the student and the instructor involved, students and instructors should consult the appropriate dean or director. If an additional appeal is needed, it may be taken to the Provost.

Auditing Courses

Degree candidates in good standing who are enrolled for a full-time program in the current term may audit one or two courses (except during the summer term) in any division of the University without charge by filing a formal application in the Registrar's Office (Black Building, Room 138) no later than September 12 in the autumn term and January 28 in the spring term. Applications require (a) the certification of the Registrar that the student is eligible to audit and (b) the approval of the dean of the school in which the courses are offered.

For obvious reasons, elementary language courses, studio courses, applied music courses, laboratory courses, and seminars are not open to auditors; other courses may be closed because of space limitations. In no case will an audited course appear on a

ADMISSION. REGISTRATION, EXPENSES. AND FINANCIAL AID 29

student's record, nor is it possible to turn an audited course into a credit course by paying the fee after the fact. Courses previously taken for credit may not be audited.

Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute for medical students, are subject to change at any time at the discretion of the Trustees.

Beginning with the academic year 1979-1980, University charges such as tuition and fees, residence halls, and board plans may be paid at the student's convenience during the term. The full amount of any charge may be paid when due without penalty, or payment may be made in installments. If partial payments are made, a finance charge of 1 percent a month is assessed on amounts not paid by the due date shown on the monthly bill. In either event, however, the student is required to sign a Retail Installment Credit Agreement at the time of registration which sets forth the full terms and conditions of payment. All charges must be paid by the end of the term.

Tuition, the student health service fee, and the health insurance premium are payable as part of registration. (If the student chooses to pay tuition in two installments, one half of the tuition is payable at registration in September and the other half is payable in January.) If these fees are paid after the last day of registration (see the Academic Calendar) they will not be reduced, and a late fee of $25 will be imposed. Checks for tuition and fees should be made payable to Columbia University.

Tuition

For the full course in medicine for one academic year (or the equivalent), payable in two installments $6,500.00

Health Service and Hospital Insurance Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute, are subject to change at the discretion of the Trustees. For all full-time students, per year (September 1 -August 31)

Health service fee $255.00

Hospital insurance premium 157.00

The student health service fee contributes to the cost of operating the Student Health Service. The hospital insurance fee pays the annual premium to the Associated Hospital Service of New York. Participation in these programs is compulsory for all full-time students; students who already carry hospital insurance, however, will be charged the health service fee only. Proof of comparable coverage must be shown at the time of registration. Upon payment of additional fees, students can acquire hospital insurance coverage for their dependents and the latter are eligible to receive the benefits of the health service program. Students should consult the Office of the Registrar, Black Building, Room 138, for further information on dependent coverage.

The Student Health Service, which holds daily office hours, is on the street level of Bard Haven Tower 1 (60 Haven Avenue).

Application Fees

For admission $25.00

For late application, or late renewal of application, for a degree 25.00

30 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

Late Registration Fees

During late registration Up to four weeks after late registration Four to eight weeks after late registration Eight to twelve weeks after late registration Beyond twelve weeks after late registration

Full -Time

$ 25.00

50.00

75.00

100.00

125.00

Part-Time $25.00 35.00 45.00 55.00 65.00

Withdrawal and Adjustment of Fees

A student in good academic standing who is not subject to discipline will always be given an honorable dismissal if he or she wishes to withdraw from the University. Withdrawal is defined as the dropping of one's entire program in a given semester as opposed to dropping a portion of one's program.

Any student withdrawing must notify the Registrar in writing: failure to attend classes or notification of instructors does not constitute formal withdrawal and will result in failing grades in all courses. Any adjustment of the tuition that the student has paid is reckoned from the date on which the Registrar receives the student's written notifica- tion. Application fees, late fees, and special fees are not refundable.

Up to and including the second Saturday after the first day of classes, tuition will be retained in the following amount:

Full-time study Part-time study

$50.00 25.00

After the second Saturday after the first day of classes in the term, the above amount is retained, plus an additional percentage of the remaining tuition (as indicated in the schedule below), for each week, or part of a week, of the term up to the date on which the student's written notice of withdrawal is received by the Registrar.

Adjustment Schedule

Second Saturday after

first day of classes Week following second Saturday after first day of classes Second following week Third following week Fourth following week Fifth following week Sixth following week Seventh following week Eighth following week

linim

um

> Fees

Retained

$25

or

$50

25

or

50

25

or

50

25

or

50

25

or

50

25

or

50

25

or

50

25

or

50

25

or

50

Percentage of

Remaining Tuition

Retained

0

10 20 30 45 60 75 90 100 (no adjustment)

Application or Renewal of Application for a Degree

Degrees are awarded three times a year in October, January, and May. A candidate for any Columbia degree (except the Ph.D. degree) must file an application with the

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 31

Registrar, 630 West 168th Street. In the 1980-1981 academic year, the last day to file for an October degree is August 1; for a January degree, October 31; and for a May degree, February 16. A late fee of $25 will be charged after these dates and until the expiration of the late filing period for each conferral date (September 4 for October degrees, December 5 for January degrees, March 30 for May degrees). Applications received after the late filing period will automatically be applied to the next conferral date.

If the student fails to earn the degree by the conferral date for which he or she has made application, the student may renew the application. A $25 late fee will be charged for late filing of renewals of application according to the same schedule as for original applications (see above).

Requests for Transcripts

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 as amended prohibits the release of educational records by institutions without the specific written consent of the student or alumnus. Students or alumni may request copies of their records by writing to the Office of the Registrar, 201 Philosophy Hall, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 10027. Official copies will be sent directly by the University only to an official address such as another university, a business firm, or government agency. However students or alumni may request that unofficial copies of their transcripts (stamped "Student Copy") be sent directly to them.

There is a charge of $2 for each transcript requested except for intrauniversity copies sent between University offices. Transcript requests are processed in the order received and require five to seven working days for processing. Specific deadlines should be mentioned, and checks accompanying requests should be made payable to Columbia University.

Estimated Expenses

Current educational expenses for a student attending the College during the first academic year are as follows:

Tuition $6,500.00

Health and Hospitalization Insurance Fees 412.00

Books and supplies 650.00

Microscope rental cost and other equipment 450.00

In addition to the educational costs listed above, each first-year student should budget approximately $4,140 to cover housing ($1,375), food ($1,900), clothing, laundry and dry cleaning ($265), and miscellaneous expenses ($600).

There are differences in the length of each academic year, and living and miscella- neous expenses vary. Each year the College Committee on Financial Aid prepares a statement of estimated expenses for students in each year of the medical school curriculum. These statements are given to all financial aid applicants at the time of distribution of the financial aid policy statement.

Microscope, Instruments, and Books

Students are required to have microscopes for courses in the first and second years of medical school. A microscope rental service is operated by the Medical Center Bookstore. For students who wish to purchase a new or used microscope, the faculty recommends a binocular instrument of standard make, complete with carrying case,

32 FINANCIAL AID

built-in illuminator, and quadruple nosepiece (4X, lOX, 40X, and lOOX oil-immersion objectives).

Students are required to purchase dissection equipment for the first-year course in gross anatomy and instruments for the diagnostic examination of patients.

The books required or recommended for courses of instruction are announced at the beginning of each academic year.

Housing

Bard Hall, at 50 Haven Avenue overlooking Riverside Park and the Hudson River, is the residence for students in the College. Its facilities include lounges, a cafeteria and several dining rooms, and a gymnasium with a swimming pool, basketball and squash courts, and facilities for other sports.

Room rates at Bard Hall depend on the length of the academic year and the room assignment. Information on the cafeteria service, room application forms, and other details are provided for entering students by the Admissions Office. For further information, write to the Bard Hall Manager, 50 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Apartments are available for married students in Bard Haven Tower I on the Medical Center campus. Married or single students may rent apartments in Towers II and III; the rents are higher. Information may be obtained from the Manager, Bard Haven Towers, 100 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Financial Aid

All financial aid awards are based on verified need. Each year applicants for financial aid are required to borrow a sum of money (unit loan) before becoming eligible for scholarships administered by the College. Financial aid awards are intended to supple- ment, rather than substitute for, the student's resources and parental contributions.

Upon acceptance to the College, students receive the financial aid policy statement, loan interest and repayment information, and an application form which must be completed promptly. Students enrolled in the College are informed annually about the policies for the coming academic year and the dates for submission of the financial aid application and loan applications. Further information may be obtained from the Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, telephone (212) 694-4100.

Spouses of medical students should consult the personnel offices of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and of the Presbyterian Hospital for information regarding employment opportunities at the Medical Center.

Scholarships

Students are urged to determine the availability of scholarship assistance from the states in which they reside and to make application for such funds when appropriate. As an example. New York State provides funds through the Tuition Assistance Program to residents who meet financial qualifications. In addition. New York State has instituted the Special Regents Medical Scholarship, which is intended to ease the physician shortage in certain areas of the state. The Financial Aid Office provides interested students with the necessary information on applications for these programs. Applicants to medical school should consult college premedical offices for information on the competitive New York State Regents Awards.

Among nongovernmental sources of funding there is the National Medical Fellow- ships, Inc., which awards fellowships to needy black Americans, American Indians,

FINANCIAL AID 33

Mexican-Americans, and mainland Puerto Ricans. Applicants must be citizens of the United States or permanent residents (visa status). Awards are given to first- and second-year medical students. Enrolled medical students should apply to NMF at 250 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 before March 1 for financial assistance for the second year of medical school. Applicants to medical school should request information from NMF.

The R.G. Haddad Foundation Scholarship is available for enrolled medical students who are United States citizens of Syrian or Lebanese descent. Applicants must have verified financial need. A grant for one year may be renewed upon application. Annually, the Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons advises students of the availability of this scholarship.

There are a number of scholarship funds administered by the Financial Aid Office of the College. With the exception of the Lawrence John Durante Scholarship (see below), students do not apply directly for these scholarships. The named scholarships listed below have been donated by alumni, foundations, corporations, and friends of the University.

Endowed Scholarship Funds

ALLEN Gift of Mrs. Vivian B. Allen.

ALUMNI A limited number of national scholarships. Provided by gifts from the P&S Alumni Association and other contributors.

ANONYMOUS Several; awarded annually.

BANBURY From the Banbury Scholarship Fund.

ALICE IDA AND ABRAHAM PENNER BERNHEIM SCHOLARSHIP FUND For tuition.

ISAAC J. AND RENA HENLY BERNHEIM Given by the family in honor of Isaac J. and Rena Henly Bernheim.

ELSIE J. BIRTWHISTLE Founded by the will of Morell Birtwhistle, in memory of his wife.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, Jr. From the George Blumenthal, Jr., Fund.

ELIZABETH ROCK BRACKETT SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Dr. Brackett, the income to be used for scholarship assistance for women medical students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

Dr. HARRY BRITENSTOOL MEMORIAL From the estate of Mrs. Blanche B. Ostheimer, in memory of her brother.

LUCIEN AND ETHEL BROWNSTONE MERIT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND A merit scholarship awarded every four years.

Dr. MOSES R. BUCHMAN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students, with preference given to those who are residents of Westchester and who plan to practice pediatrics. Established by friends of Dr. Buchman.

DAVID C. BULL MEMORIAL In memory of Dr. David C. Bull, a former member of the Department of Surgery.

RICHARD BUTLER Open to men born in the state of Ohio who are qualified for admission to, and plan to enter, Columbia College, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, or the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

34 FINANCIAL AID

ALONZO CLARK Founded by the will of Alonzo Clark, M.D., LL.D., for many years president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1890 Given by a member of the class.

CLASS OF 1899 Given by the class in commemoration of the thirty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1912 Given by the class on the fifteenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1913 For medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1920 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1924 To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of their graduation.

CLASS OF 1928 Given at their tenth reunion.

CLASS OF 1932 For a scholarship room. Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1933 For a scholarship.

CLASS OF 1934 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1936 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1937 Awarded for tuition of medical students.

CLASS OF 1938 Awarded annually to assist a student in the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1939 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1940 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1942 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1952 Given by members of the class on the tenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1953 Given by members of the class.

CLASS OF 1964 Established in memory of Dr. Howard Gerstel.

HENRY D. CRUGER Bequest of Helen Cruger, in memory of the Henry D. Cruger family.

CHARLES A. DANA FOUNDATION, Inc. Established by the Foundation.

ANTHONY M. DeANGELIS Open to a student of the fourth-year class. Given by Dr. Anthony M. DeAngelis.

HORACE DENNETT Open to students in the third- and fourth-year classes.

DAVID M. DEVENDORF Preference is given to a candidate from Herkimer County, New York, preferably one from the town of Herkimer. Given by Mrs. David M. Devendorf of Herkimer, New York, in memory of her husband. Dr. David M. Devendorf, Class of 1861.

FRANCIS E. DOUGHTY Given by Miss Phoebe Caroline Swords, in memory of Dr. Francis E. Doughty, Class of 1869.

FINANCIAL AID 35

LAWRENCE JOHN DURANTE Given by members of the Class of 1961, in memory of Lawrence John Durante. Awarded annually to a senior student with verified financial need by the Durante Scholarship Fund Committee after review of the applications of qualified students.

EDWARD PERCY EGLEE Bequest of Edward Percy Eglee, Class of 1913, member of the Faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons from 1919 until his retirement in 1953, when he was a clinical professor of medicine.

JOSEPH HERMAN AND HANNAH EICHNER Established by the will of Benjamin Bernard Eichner, Class of 1919.

JOSEPH C. FOSTER Given by Mrs. Esther J. Foster, in memory of her husband.

VIRGINIA KNEELAND FRANTZ Bequest of Dr. Frantz.

NELLIE ALDEN FRANZ Bequest of Nellie A. Franz to Columbia University for scholarships to worthy young women for undergraduate or graduate study, with preference for those interested in medicine, nursing, sociology, and journalism.

GEORGE AND CHARLIE Given by the Alumni Association of the College, in memory of George Peters and Charles Costello, long-time employees of the Medical Center.

JACOB HARSEN Given by Dr. Jacob Harsen.

FRANK HARTLEY Given by friends and colleagues of Dr. Frank Hartley, class of 1880.

WILLIAM H. HEMINGWAY

AARON HIMMELSTEIN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students. Given by Dr. Himmelstein's friends and colleagues.

IRMA T. HIRSCHL SCHOLARSHIPS From the estate of Irma T. Hirschl. Awarded on the criteria of financial need, outstanding scholarship and dedication to medical science, the easing of pain and protection of life.

CHARLES EUGENE HUBER, Sr. Bequest of Francis D. Huber, in memory of his father.

FRANCIS HUBER Open to a graduate of any institution other than Columbia University, City College, Barnard College, or Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

VIOLA B. HUBER Open to a graduate of Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ABRAHAM JACOBI For graduates of Columbia University and City College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber, in memory of Dr. Abraham Jacobi.

EDWARD R. JEAL Awarded to deserving students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

CHARLES CHRISTIAN LIEB Awarded to a student interested in the study of pharmacology. Given in memory of Dr. Charles Christian Lieb, Hosack Professor of Pharmacology.

LI MING Awarded with preference to students of Chinese birth or descent or nationality. Established by bequest of Mr. Li Ming.

MARJORIE McANENY Open to a graduate of Barnard College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

36 FINANCIAL AID

ELIZABETH HALL McCULLOGH Given by Mrs. William G. Heaphy in memory of her sister, Dr. Elizabeth McCullogh, an alumna of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

HERBERT D. MANLEY Given as bequest by the late Dr. Herbert D. Manley.

FRANCIS HARTMAN MARKOE Given by Madeline Shelton Markoe, in memory of her husband.

M. MONTGOMERY MAZE From the estate of M. Montgomery Maze, Pearl River, N.Y. Part of this fund may be used for scholarships and/or fellowships, preferably for graduates of the Pearl River High School.

MABEL C. MEAD Awarded to women students of Chinese ancestry. Preference given to those desiring to study medicine.

VIVIAN AND SEYMOUR MILSTEIN ENDOWMENT FOR SCHOLARSHIPS Estab- lished by the donors in honor of their friends and physicians, Drs. David Habif and Duane Todd.

SAMUEL J. MORITZ MEMORIAL Given by the executors of the estate of Samuel J. Moritz.

GULLI LINDH MULLER Bequest of the donor to be awarded with preference to a gifted woman student.

P&S SCHOLARSHIP AID AND LOAN FUND Established by the wives of the members of the Faculty of Medicine, faculty, and friends of the College.

RUDOLPH AND MARY E. PFEIFFER Given by Mrs. Mary E. Pfeiffer.

PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIP Granted with preference to sons or daughters of alumni of Presbyterian Hospital. Given by the Society of the Alumni of Presbyterian Hospital.

WILLIAM COLE RAPPLEYE Established at the retirement of Dean Rappleye.

RICHARD RHODEBECK Given by Mrs. Richard Rhodebeck, in memory of her husband.

DAVID H. ROUS From family, friends, and business associates of David H. Rous, the income to be divided equally among the Graduate School of Business, Columbia College, and the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

LOUIS AND RACHAEL RUDIN Established by the Rudin Foundation for students of excellence who would not otherwise be able to complete their education.

SAGAMORE Awarded to needy students.

JOSEPH F. SAPHIR MEMORIAL Given by Elsa M. Saphir, in memory of her husband, Joseph F. Saphir, Class of 1902.

THE MARY S. SAXE SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Mary S. Saxe.

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Given by faculty members, alumni, and students, in honor of Dr. Severinghaus's services to the College.

BERNARD E. SMITH MEMORIAL Given by Mrs. Gertrude Smith, in memory of her husband.

THE JAMES A. STEVENSON MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by Mrs. Ann Stevenson Hardesty, in memory of her brother James Albert Stevenson, Class of 1943.

FINANCIAL AID 37

EDGAR EGINTON STEWART, Jr., MEMORIAL Given by Dr. E. E. Stewart, in memory of his son.

ARTHUR PURDY STOUT MEMORIAL Given by the Arthur Purdy Stout Society.

ARNOLD STURMDORF Awarded to one or more students in their third or fourth year of medical school. Bequest of Miriam Sturmdorf.

HAROLD S. VAUGHAN Bequest of Dr. Harold Vaughan, Class of 1904.

ANDREA VICALE MEMORIAL Established by Dr. Carmine T. Vicale, in memory of his father.

HERMANN VOLLMER Established in his memory by his wife.

THEODORE L. VOSSELER Preference is given to graduates of Colgate University. Given by Dr. Allison J. Vosseler, Class of 1933, in memory of his father. Dr. Theodore L. Vosseler.

ROBERT M. WECHSLER Given by Dr. I. S. Wechsler, in memory of his son, Robert M. Wechsler, Class of 1945, and by members of the class of 1945, in memory of their classmate.

WHITING— Dr. FORDYCE B. St. JOHN SCHOLARSHIP FUND Gift by the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation, in honor of Dr. Fordyce B. St. John.

Dr. JAMES LANCELOT WILSON Awarded to a student selected by the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Gift Funds

CITIBANK MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by the Citibank. The recipient must have demonstrated need for support and he/she must be a New York State resident.

VALERIE AND GEORGE DELACORTE FOUNDATION Annual gift.

GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP GIFT FUND Gifts and memorials by various donors.

CHARLES F. IKLE SCHOLARSHIP AND RESEARCH FUND Grant by the New York Community Trust.

JAMES T. LEE FOUNDATION, Inc. Annual grant to medical students.

JULIUS E. STOLFI MEDICAL EDUCATION AND RESEARCH FUND SCHOLAR- SHIP

THE SULZBERGER FOUNDATION Annual gift. Awarded to senior students with very good academic records, significant financial need, and plans to pursue careers in family medicine or general internal medicine in nonurban areas.

Loans

Loans are available to all full-time medical students. These funds are provided by various sources, including the federal and state governments, the University, and also private agencies, as outlined below.

Foreign students who hold an F-1 student visa are eligible to borrow only from University funds and must have comakers who are citizens or permanent residents of the United States. Comakers should not be University employees. Foreign students may borrow

38 FINANCIAL AID

from federal or state loan funds upon being granted permanent resident visa status in the United States.

Federal Health Professions Loans. These are allocated by the Bureau of Health Manpower of the National Institutes of Health to individual medical schools, which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be loaned. Assuming the availability of adequate funding, the maximum loan to a student in an academic year is the cost of tuition plus $2,500. Loans are repayable to the school over a ten-year period beginning one year after completing or interrupting the prescribed full-time course of study. Interest at the annual rate of 7 percent begins to accrue when the loan becomes repayable.

Repayment of Health Professions Loans may be deferred up to three years for those who become members of a uniformed federal service on sustained full-time duty (i.e., the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Coast and Geodetic Survey), the Public Health Service, or the Peace Corps. For those pursuing advanced profes- sional training, repayment may be deferred to completion of the training program. Interest does not accrue during period of deferment.

Health Professions Loans are forgiven or canceled under certain conditions: (1) In the instance of students who agree to practice medicine for at least two years in a region of a state that has been determined to need additional personnel, the federal government will repay 60 percent of the outstanding principal and interest on any educational loan(s) for the cost of professional education. For a third year of practice in such an area, an additional 25 percent of the loan(s) will be repaid. (2) The outstanding loans of students who fail to complete their health professions studies will be repaid if they are in exceptionally needy circumstances, from a low-income or disadvantaged family, and cannot be expected to resume studies within two years. (3) Loans of students who die or suffer permanent and total disability will be canceled.

National Direct Student Loans. Funds are allocated by the Office of Education to schools which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be awarded. The total (undergraduate and graduate school loans) available to a student from the NDSL program is $12,000. The current interest rate, payable during the repayment period, is 4 percent on the unpaid principal. Repayment begins six months after graduation or after leaving school. The repayment period may extend up to ten years. Repayment may be deferred for up to three years during active U.S. military service, during service in the Peace Corps or Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), or during service in an internship required to begin professional practice.

Federal and State Guaranteed Loans. Under the auspices of the Office of Education of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, federally insured loans are made by authorized banks, savings-and-loan associations, credit unions, pension funds, and insurance companies. The maximum loan each academic year under this program is $5,000, and the total outstanding loan balance at any one time may not exceed $25,000. Lending institutions participating in this program can provide information regarding interest rates, repayment and deferment of repayment.

Other Sources of Loans. The National Education Loan Guarantee Program of the American Medical Association Education and Research Foundation (AMA-ERF) makes possible loans to all medical students, interns, and residents in good standing who are United States citizens, provided they are enrolled in full-time training at an AMA- approved American medical school or hospital and can demonstrate financial need. Medical students must have completed their first semester in order to qualify. The maximum amount that can be borrowed in a twelve-month period (September 1 to August 31) is $2,500. Up to a total of $12,500 may be borrowed over a period of seven years. The minimum loan for any one interim note is $400.

Interest rates have not been set at the time of this printing. Interest charges must be paid in full each year by the student. Payment of principal is deferred during the training period. Prepayment of principal may be made at any time without penalty.

FINANCIAL AID 39

University loan funds are also intended to supplement students' resources when monies are available. Included among these are the following funds:

PETER AMAZON Bequest of Peter Amazon.

LEONARD ALEXANDER ARMS Bequest of Lydia B. Arms, in memory of her husband, to create a revolving loan fund for scholarship and research to medical students and graduate students at P&S.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, Jr. Used for the assistance of needy students in the medical school.

CLASS OF 1906 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1906.

CLASS OF 1919 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1919. To be used for loans to deserving^ students.

CAROL ELISSA GARDNER Established by Dr. M. Jordan Thorstad, in memory of his wife. Dr. Carol Elissa Gardner Thorstad, Class of 1941.

DAVID GREENE A bequest from the estate of Fannye Greene Meyerson, in honor of her brother, Dr. David Greene. Used for assistance of needy students in the medical school and Columbia College.

GEORGE L. HAWKINS, Jr. Gift of George L. Hawkins, Jr., Class of 1941.

B. H. HOMAN, Jr. REVOLVING LOAN FUND Long-term, low-interest loans for needy students.

ROBERT ABBE MACKENZIE Established by friends, colleagues, and patients of Dr. MacKenzie, an alumnus of the Class of 1921.

GEORGE W. MERCK MEMORIAL Established by the Merck Company Foundation in honor of George W. Merck. For graduates of P&S, wherever they are in training, or to graduates of other medical schools in training at hospitals affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

JESSIE SMITH NOYES

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Established by the Clark Foundation as an unrestricted, discretionary fund to be used primarily for the support of students and student activities. Priority given to fourth-year students who are subjected to increased living and transportation costs because of electing clerkships at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, N.Y.

WALTER C. AND MARJORIE C. STEIN Bequest of Marjorie C. Stein.

STEINHARDT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Bequest of Samuel C. Steinhardt. Awarded to graduates of one of the colleges of the City University of New York who have attended public schools exclusively (except for religious instruction). To be repaid in fifteen years; without interest for the first ten years; with 5 percent annual interest thereafter on the unpaid balance.

In addition to the foregoing, periodically there are funds for short-term emergency loans, which are administered through the Financial Aid Office of the medical school.

Prizes

Dr. HARRY S. ALTMAN PRIZE Awarded to an outstanding senior student who demonstrates a special interest in pediatric ambulatory care. Established to honor Dr. Harry S. Altman, in recognition of his outstanding contributions to scholarship in pediatrics.

40 FINANCIAL AID

HERBERT J. BARTELSTONE AWARD IN PHARMACOLOGY Awarded to a member of the graduating class of the College who has demonstrated exceptional accomplishments in pharmacology. Established to honor the memory of Professor Herbert J. Bartelstone, member of the Department of Pharmacology from 1950 until 1973, dedicated and inspiring teacher, and uncompromising advocate of the importance of rigorous preparation in basic medical science in the education of the physician.

COAKLEY MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Otolaryngology to a senior student who has done outstanding work in the field.

TITUS MUNSON COAN PRIZE Awarded to the senior student who has submitted the best essay in biological science or otherwise best contributed to its advancement. Bequest of Titus M. Coan.

THOMAS F. COCK, M.D., PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for excellence in obstetrics and gynecology.

FREDERICK PARKER GAY MEMORIAL AWARD Awarded to the senior student whose work in microbiology is judged the most outstanding. Given by Mrs. Frederick Parker Gay, in memory of her husband.

JANEWAY PRIZE Awarded to the student graduating from the College with the highest marks for efficiency and ability. Given by the bequest of Matilda S. J. Wisner.

Dr. HAROLD LAMPORT BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for the best thesis reporting original biomedical research. Gift of the Lamport Foundation.

ROBERT F. LOEB AWARD Awarded to a senior student who, in the opinion of the Department of Medicine, has shown the greatest promise of excellence in clinical medicine. Established in memory of Dr. Robert F. Loeb, Bard Professor of Medicine, and chairman of the Department of Medicine from 1947 to 1959.

F. PHILIP LOWENFISH PRIZE IN DERMATOLOGY Awarded to the individual who has done the most creative and original research in dermatology. Given by Mrs. Lowenfish, in her husband's memory.

EDITH AND DENTON McKANE MEMORIAL AWARD Bequest of Edith U. McKane. Awarded to a senior student for excellence in basic or clinical research in ophthalmology.

Dr. HAROLD LEE MEIERHOF MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded on recommendation of the professor of pathology to the student who has done the best work in the field during the four years of medical school. Given by the parents of Dr. Harold Lee Meierhof, Class of 1917.

NEW YORK ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL AWARD An annual prize awarded to a senior student upon nomination by the Department of Orthopedic Surgery, for outstand- ing performance in the field.

JOSEPH GARRISON PARKER AWARD Awarded to the senior in the College who best exemplifies, through a continued personal interest and activities in art, music, literature, or the public interest, the fact that Living and Learning go on together. Given by Dr. and Mrs. Philip Parker, in memory of their son, Joseph, Class of 1948, whose promising career in medicine was cut short by death in 1953, but in whose life the love of music and the arts was a constant source of inspiration.

P&S CLASS OF 1924, Dr. ALLEN O. WHIPPLE MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded to a senior student, upon nomination of the Department of Surgery, for outstanding performance in the field.

STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES 41

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Psychiatry to a second-year student for the best work in psychopathology.

SAMUEL W. ROVER AND LEWIS ROVER AWARD An annual prize to be awarded to a graduating medical student or a male graduate student for scholarship and outstanding achievement in biochemistry at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ANN RYAN PRIZE IN BIOCHEMISTRY To be awarded to deserving women graduate students.

HELEN M. SCIARRA PRIZE Awarded to a senior student in the College for outstanding work in neurology.

Dr. ALFRED STEINER AWARD Presented annually to one or more students chosen by a faculty committee on the basis of achievement in medical research. Funded by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in honor of Dr. Steiner.

Dr. HAROLD B. STEVELMAN AWARD Awarded to a senior student for excellence in adult cardiology. In honor of Dr. Harold Stevelman, Class of 1958, in appreciation of his service to the family of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert.

UROLOGY PRIZES Awarded to senior students for the best essays on urological subjects.

Dr. WILLIAM PERRY WATSON PRIZE IN PEDIATRICS Awarded on the nomina- tion of the professor of pediatrics to that member of the graduating class of the College who has shown the most notable work in the study of the diseases of infants and children.

Dr. WILLIAM RAYNER WATSON AWARD Awarded to that member of the graduating class who has done the most outstanding work in psychiatry during the four years of attendance at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

SIGMUND L. WILENS PRIZE Awarded to a member of the graduating class who, in the opinion of the Department of Pathology, has been distinguished by special excellence in pathology. Gift of Dr. Marie Renate Dische Wilens, in memory of her husband, Dr. Sigmund L. Wilens.

Student and Alumni Activities

All students enrolled in the College enjoy the privileges and facilities of the University campus, including the University libraries.

P&S Club

The P&S Club was founded over eighty years ago by John R. Mott, who later won the Nobel Peace Prize. The Club is the most active and comprehensive student organization in American medical education today. All matriculated students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are members, eligible to participate in extracurricular activities of their choice. Under the guidance of the Faculty Advisory Board, the student cabinet, led by the president, assumes the entire responsibility for management of the Club. The cabinet consists of four elected members from each class and those who chair the following committees: Orientation, Handbook, Student-Faculty Home Visits, Films, Concerts, Choral Society, Bard Hall Players, Fine Arts, Athletics, Community Youth Work, Accessories, Social, and Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Society.

42 STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES

Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society

A chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha, the national honor medical society, was founded at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1907. Students are elected to membership in the senior year by a committee of the faculty appointed by the Dean. The committee is chaired by the Alpha Omega Alpha Councilor of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Student membership is determined according to the constitution of the national society. Election is limited to those whose scholastic qualifications place them in the upper 25 percent of the class. The number of student members elected from any class may not exceed one-sixth of the number expected to graduate in that class. Although scholastic excellence is required for membership, integrity, capacity for leadership, compassion, and fairness in dealing with one's colleagues are judged to be of equal significance.

P&S Alumni Association

The P&S Alumni Relations Office serves to foster and maintain cordial relationships between the College of Physicians and Surgeons and its alumni, and is responsible for alumni relations programming and alumni annual fund raising projects.

Regular members of the Alumni Association include all those awarded the M.D. or Med.Sc.D. degrees from the College as well as those awarded the Certificate in Psychoanalytic Medicine. Associate members include the faculty of the College, all house staff members and visiting fellows at hospitals affiliated with P&S and all Ph.D. graduates of the Basic Sciences Curricula.

The work of the Alumni Association is accomplished through the efforts of its officers and the sixteen standing and ad hoc committees, all of whom form the constituency of the P&S Alumni Council. Members are encouraged to participate in the work and activities sponsored by the Association. Liaison with the College is facilitated through the office of the Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs. Among the important functions of the Association is participation in the publication of P&S, a magazine cosponsored by the alumni and the medical school. This publication serves as a major form of communica- tion between the school and its alumni, the faculty, the students and their parents, and other friends and associates of the College.

Restricted revenues raised by the Alumni Association provide funds for endowed scholarships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and toward the endowment of a P&S Alumni Association professorship. Unrestricted revenues raised by the Association allow the College flexibility in applying funds to areas of greatest need. Routinely, a substantial stipend from unrestricted revenues goes to the P&S Club.

As future alumni, students play an important role in the work and deliberations of the Alumni Association. As members of the Student-Alumni Relations Committee, students and alumni work together in addressing students' current needs and seeking solutions to their problems.

Information about the Alumni Association and its activities is available from the P&S Alumni Relations Office, 2005-C, Black Building, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032. Telephone: (212) 694-3498.

The Program of Instruction

The first-year curriculum is largely devoted to basic science courses with correlation clinics to demonstrate the application of scientific information to the practice of medicine. The first-year student also studies the impact of health care systems in our current society on the individual patient and physician. Second-year courses concentrate on the clinical relevance of basic science concepts as the bridging process to clinical instruction begins. Correlations between pathology and pathophysiology are empha- sized. The development of basic clinical skills begins in the second semester and culminates in a four-week clerkship. Throughout both preclinical years elective opportu- nities are available for pursuit of areas of interest.

The major clinical year is devoted exclusively to rotations on clerkships in the clinical disciplines. Under close supervision the students are helped to develop the skills and knowledge required for the practice of clinical medicine. Students learn to elicit a comprehensive history and to carry out a complete physical examination. They learn to develop professional relationships with patients, and they acquire an understanding of the mechanisms of disease and of the principles necessary for valid diagnostic appraisal and effective therapeutic plans.

All courses of the first three years of the curriculum are required of all students. In the fourth year, with the guidance of faculty advisers, students design individual elective curricula, drawn from a wide range of basic scientific electives, clinical electives, and research programs offered by the faculty. Each fourth-year student is required to take a one-month selective in ambulatory care which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. The elective courses of all departments are described in a catalog which is printed annually and distributed to students and faculty. Students are permitted to spend three months of the curriculum in elective programs offered by other medical schools. In addition, the School of Public Health offers international medicine programs that provide opportunities to study the organization and delivery of health services in many countries of the world.

During the elective curriculum students have available the resources of the entire University. Students are encouraged to utilize elective curriculum time to reach career decisions. Faculty advisers stress the acquisition of knowledge and skills in areas of medicine apart from the student's career discipline, and they encourage students to gain experience in clinical and/or laboratory research.

The College reserves the right to make changes in the program of studies and courses of instruction at any time.

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence

All courses are rated on an Honors-Pass-Fail system and these ratings only are recorded on the official transcripts. Students are not ranked within the class. Faculty provide narrative descriptions of student performances in preclinical courses (Abnormal Human Biology, Introduction to the Patient, and Psychiatric Medicine I and II), major clinical year clerkships, and elective programs. These evaluations become part of the student's permanent academic record in the Office of the Dean.

There are three standing faculty committees concerned with students' academic performances. These committees are: the First Year Class Faculty, the Second Year Class Faculty, and the Clinical Committee. The latter deals with academic performances in the major clinical year and the elective curriculum. The standing committees meet during each academic year to review student performances and to make decisions related to course failures and to promotions. Course failures in all years of the curriculum must be corrected according to the directives of the faculty committees. A

44 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

student may be advanced to the next academic year of the medical school curriculum only upon recommendation of the faculty committee. In any year of the curriculum students may be dismissed for poor scholarship. Repetition of a year of the curriculum may be recommended by a faculty committee. The faculty committees may direct students whose performances are marginal to undertake additional work to correct deficiencies and strengthen overall performance in any discipline.

Students are informed in writing of the academic decisions of all faculty committees. Students have the right to appeal decisions of the faculty committees. A student who wishes to appeal may request the concerned committee to reverse or alter a decision. If the committee reaffirms the original decision, the student may direct an appeal to the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, who may refer the appeal to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Council for final decision.

The Faculty of Medicine reserves the right to dismiss, or to deny admission, registration, readmission, or graduation to any student who in the judgment of the Faculty of Medicine is determined to be unsuited for the study or practice of medicine.

Students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are required to pass National Board examinations Parts I and II prior to graduation.

Leaves of absence may be granted by the Dean for a limited period of time in exceptional circumstances only for health reasons or personal emergencies.

Key to Course Numbers

Medical Center courses: The suffixes F and S refer to first- and second-year courses, respectively. Numbers without a suffix indicate major clinical year clerkships that are repeated throughout the year in instruction periods of twelve weeks or less.

Summary of Curriculum (for students entering in September 1980)

First Year

SEPTEMBER 2, 1980 to JANUARY 9, 1981. First semester. JANUARY 12, 1981 to JUNE 5, 1981. Second semester.

Second Year

SEPTEMBER 8, 1981 through MAY 31, 1982.

Third and Fourth Years

JULY 1, 1982 through APRIL 30, 1984.

Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses of the First and Second Years

Abnormal Human Biology lOlS.

Dr. Canfield and interdepartmental associates: Cardiology, Dr. Drusin; Pulmonary, Dr. Harvey; Endocrinology-Metabolism, Dr. Holub; Gastroen- terology. Dr. Glickman; Hematology. Dr. Rifkind; Immunology. Dr. Butler;

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 45

Infectious Diseases, Dr. Neu; Oncology, Dr. Weinstein; Nephrology, Dr. Al-Awqati; Surgery, Dr. Lo-Gerfo.

Exercises in the application and correlation of the basic sciences to a broad range of clinical problems. Teaching is by seminar/lecture and is closely integrated with courses in pathology, pharmacology, and introductory medicine.

Anatomy lOlF. Microscopic anatomy Dr. Nunez and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies of structure in relation to function.

Anatomy 102F. Human anatomy

Drs. April, Moss, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory encompassing basic morphological and functional human anatomy.

Anatomy 103F. Developmental anatomy Dr. Pfenninger and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and laboratory emphasizing the fundamental processes of embryogenesis; closely integrated with Anatomy 1 OIF-Microscopic anatomy.

Biochemistry lOlF. Introductory biochemistry Dr. Gold and departmental staff.

Lectures and conferences stressing principles of biochemistry and their relationship to disease processes.

Genetics lOlS. Introductory clinical genetics Dr. Rifkind and associates.

Lectures emphasizing general principles of genetics and their clinical application.

Medicine lOlS. Introduction to the practice of medicine Drs. Canfield, Marcus, and associates.

Lectures, conferences, and seminars addressing ethical and personal issues relevant to the practice of medicine.

Medicine 102S. Introduction to the patient Dr. Morris and associates.

A series of interdepartmental presentations and demonstrations followed by an intensive four-week preceptorship (at Harlem, Overlook, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital) during which the student will learn to take a comprehensive medical history and to perform a complete physical examination.

Microbiology lOlF. General microbiology Drs. Erianger, Ginsberg, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory covering the basic principles of cell regulation, immunology, virology, and the biology of pathogenic organisms.

Anatomy-Physiology 106S. Neural science

Drs. Kandel, Kelly, Kupfermann, Rowland, Schwartz, and Spencer.

Lectures, seminars, laboratories, and clinical demonstrations to provide an integrated understanding of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, biochemistry, and behavior.

Nutrition lOlF. Introduction to nutrition Dr. Winick and associates.

Lectures that define the elements of nutrition essential for good health.

Pathology lOlF. General pathology

Drs. Branwood, Fenoglio, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory emphasizing the mechanisms of injury and repair in cells, tissues, and organ systems.

46 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Pathology 102S. Systemic pathology

Drs. Branwood, Fenoglio, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies to elucidate the pathogenesis of findings in disease.

Pathology 103S. Neuropathology Dr. Duffy and associates.

Lectures, demonstrations, and microscopic studies of diseases of the nervous system.

Pharmacology lOlS. General and special pharmacology Dr. Kahn and departmental staff.

Lectures, seminars, and demonstrations to elucidate the basic principles essential for the effective use of drugs as therapeutic or diagnostic agents.

Medicine 105F. Physician-patient relationship Drs. Hembree, Rosenberg, and associates.

Preceptor sessions emphasizing the central role of the physician-patient relationship in the practice of medicine and the importance of the effects of health care organization and other factors on that relationship.

Physiology lOlF. Human physiology Dr. Nocenti and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and conferences to define the function of specific ceils, tissues, and organs and their homeostatic mechanisms.

Psychiatry lOlF. Psychiatric Medicine, I Dr. Yudofsky and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars presenting the salient features of normal development.

Psychiatry 102S. Psychiatric Medicine, II Dr. Yudofsky and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars covering the major mental illnesses and the elements of patient interviewing.

Public Health lOlF. Structure of health care systems Dr. Rosenberg and associates.

Lectures and seminar groups on the current organization of health care.

Public Health 102F. Epidemiology Dr. Rush and associates.

Lectures and seminars to present epidemiological principles.

Public Health 103F. Biostatistics Dr. Fleiss and associates.

Lectures on the basic elements of biostatistics applicable to medicine.

Public Health 104F. Parasitic diseases Dr. Despommier and associates.

Lectures and laboratories stressing parasitic diseases likely to be encountered and the techniques necessary for the diagnosis of these diseases.

Major Clinical Year

Anesthesiology 201. Clinical clerkship in anesthesiology Dr. Bendixen and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship that provides training in preanesthetic evaluation, management, and postanesthetic care of surgical patients. At the conclusion of the clerkship students should be able to do the following: (1) describe the major factors to be considered in selecting anesthetic drugs and techniques for patients undergoing common surgical procedures; (2) describe indications for positive pressure ventilation of the lungs and how the adequacy of such ventilation can be determined; (3) differentiate between a patent and obstructed airway in a patient and demonstrate on a patient or mannikin his/her ability to obtain a patent airway by positioning; (4) describe the indications for use of an endotracheal tube; (5)

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 47

describe procedures used for resuscitation of a patient who has had cardiac arrest and demonstrate on a mannikin his/her ability to perform mouth-to-mouth ventilation and closed chest cardiac massage; (6) describe indications for and contraindications to the use of local anesthetics to provide infiltration and nerve block anesthesia; and (7) describe the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of local anesthetic drug toxicity.

Dermatology 201. Dr. Harber and staff.

Medicine 201. Clinical clerkship in medicine

Dr. Loeb and staff at the Harlem. Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's

Hospitals.

Extended clinical experience under a preceptorship system at Presbyterian Hospital and at another affiliated hospital, Harlem, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital. At the conclusion of the clerkship the student should be capable of taking a precise medical history, performing an accurate physical examination, interpreting basic laboratory data, formulating a cogent problem list, and communicat- ing these data in accurate verbal and written form. These skills will be acquired in the patient care setting in order to increase the student's understanding of the physiologic, psychologic, and social aspects of medicine and to prepare the student for the assumption of clinical responsibility under close supervision.

Neurology 201. Clinical clerkship in neurology

Dr. Rowland and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian

Hospital.

A comprehensive experience in clinical neurology provided at the bedside at the Neurological Institute. Under close supervision of a junior and senior resident and an attending physician in neurology, students learn to obtain a systematic neurological history and to perform and interpret the neurological examination. By active participation in the evaluation and care of patients, expertise is obtained in the diagnosis and treatment of common neurological diseases. Students learn how to do a lumbar puncture and they become familiar with electrodiagnostic and neuroradiological tests. Experience is also obtained in neurosurgery and rehabilitation medicine. Management of neurological emergencies is learned during night call with the senior resident. In addition, a comprehensive core knowledge of clinical neurology is ensured by a course syllabus, daily rounds, and preceptor sessions with the attending physician.

Neurology 202. Neurosurgery

Dr. Schlesinger and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian

Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Obstetrics and Gynecology 201. Clinical clerkship in obstetrics and

gynecology

Dr. Vande Wiele and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St.

Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology under close supervision of house staff and attendings. On the gynecological wards and in the clinics the student learns to take a sexual and gynecological history, to examine the breasts, abdomen, and pelvis, to distinguish normal and abnormal findings relative to gynecological disease, and to diagnose and manage benign and malignant gynecologic tumors. The student acquires the skills needed to approach problems of sexuality and an understanding of the impact of changing physiological states in menarche and menopause. On the obstetrical service the student learns the medical and surgical complications encountered during pregnancy and delivery, and the student learns to diagnose and manage pregnancy. The student participates in the conduct of labor, the delivery, and the care of the newborn.

Orthopedic Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in orthopedic surgery Dr. Garcia and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

On the orthopedic surgery clerkship students learn to perform an orthopedic physical examination and to take an orthopedic history from a patient. The clerkship provides students with insight into the more common musculoskeletal problems (including fractures and trauma) and the basic approaches to management of these problems by an orthopedic surgeon. The student is expected to gain insight into how the discipline of orthopedic surgery works in conjunction with other specialties and how an orthopedic service provides in-patient and out-patient care.

48 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Otolaryngology 201. Clinical clerkship in otolaryngology Dr. Abramson and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship designed to teach the skills of physical examination of the ear, nose, and throat and to provide an understanding of certain diseases where this examination is crucial in diagnosis and management. The clerkship includes selected didactic lectures, followed by a preceptor-type experience in the clinic where students examine and work up a number of patients under the direct supervision of a faculty member.

Pediatrics 201. Clinical clerkship in pediatrics

Dr. Katz and staff at the Babies Hospital (Presbyterian), Harlem, Roosevelt,

and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A clinical clerkship providing both in-patient and ambulatory care experience. The student is introduced to the study of infants and children: growth and development, diseases, and health care maintenance. The student develops basic skills in the following areas: taking the pediatric history from the parents and from the older child; performing the physical examination of the pediatric patient, including the young infant; observing, analyzing, and recording the interaction between parent and child; and ordering and interpreting laboratory tests. The student learns to integrate the data acquired and formulate an appropriate problem list and plan for the patient. The student also learns to make the basic measurements of physical, neurological, and psychosocial growth and development, and to plot and assess the data.

Psychiatry 201. Clinical clerkship in psychiatry

Dr. Sachar and staff at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Harlem,

Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in psychiatry. In active participation in patient care under faculty supervision the student is expected to learn to conduct a psychiatric history and mental status examination and to develop refined interviewing skills, noting verbal and nonverbal behavior. The student learns to make a psychiatric differential diagnosis, to use psychotropic drugs effectively, to evaluate suicide potential, and to develop and enhance therapeutic rapport. The clerkship aims to provide an appreciation of the effects of psychological, social, and biological phenomena on illness-related behaviors.

Radiology 201. Diagnostic radiology (medical) Dr. Seaman and staff.

Radiology 202. Diagnostic radiology (surgical) Dr. Seaman and staff.

Rehabilitation Medicine 201.

Dr. Downey and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian

Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in surgery

Dr. Reemtsma and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A comprehensive clinical clerkship during which the student is expected to demonstrate improve- ment in ability to perform histories and physical examinations on surgical patients and to formulate rational diagnostic and therapeutic plans. The student is expected to demonstrate increasing skill and competence in performing selected procedures, in assuming supervised responsibility for patient care, in communicating succinctly and with clarity to patients and colleagues, and in building a functional body of critically examined information regarding common surgical entities.

Surgery 202. Lectures and demonstrations in surgical pathology Drs. Fenoglio and Lane and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Surgery 201.

Urology 201. Clinical clerkship in urology Dr. Olsson and staff.

During the clinical clerkship in urology students learn to identify common disorders of the genitourinary tract through precise patient interviews and examinations. Both ambulatory and in-patients are evaluated. By knowing diagnostic methods unique to urology, students are able to formulate appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic plans.

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 49

Fourth Year

Interdepartment 301. Ambulatory care /public health selective Dr. M. Stewart, course coordinator.

Each student in the fourth year is required to select an elective in ambulatory care, which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. {For the rest of the Fourth Year see page 43 and the elective catalogue.)

Special Programs

M.D.-Ph.D. Program

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences have formed a cooperative program leading to both the M.D. and Ph.D. degrees. This program is supervised by the Graduate Biomedical Sciences Advisory Committee and permits medical students who have a serious interest in basic biomedical research to obtain the Ph.D. degree in one of the fourteen participating disciplines in the program. At least two additional years of study beyond the four required for the M.D. degree should be anticipated for completion of this program. The program is supported by traineeships from the National Institutes of Health.

Applicants interested in the M.D.-Ph.D. program should write for further information and application forms to:

Dr. David Schachter

Chairman, Graduate Biomedical Sciences

Advisory Committee Department of Physiology 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

They should, moreover, make separate, concurrent application for admission to the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Joint M.D./M.P.H. Program

This dual degree program is under the joint direction of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the School of Public Health. In addition to preclinical and clinical medical training, students gain substantive knowledge of the health care delivery system and the technological, social, and political forces that contribute to the problems and patterns of illness, medical care, and delivery of services. They also develop concrete skills of research or administration applicable in interdisciplinary health service settings, both clinical and community based.

Before being considered for admission to the joint degree program, the applicant must first be accepted as a degree candidate in the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Formal application to the School of Public Health may then be made at any time before the student enters the fourth year of medical training. The overall length of the joint program, registration, and scheduling patterns differ for individual students. The total elapsed time could be as short as four years, but might extend beyond the four-year graduation date of the medical school. In general, during the first three years the joint degree student uses vacation and free time in the medical schedule to cross-register for public health courses. In the fourth year the student registers concurrently in the two schools, permitting opportunities to complete core, track, and elective public health courses and also carry the required clinical elective work in the medical curriculum. The M.D. and the M.P.H. degree may be awarded simultaneously at the end of the fourth year or separately when the requirements have been met.

50 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

For further information, consult the Dean's Office in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y., 10032, or the Director's Office in the School of Public Health, 600 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Educational programs are offered by the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine to students who have already earned a bachelor's degree. They may apply for admission to a two-year program leading to the Master of Science degree in physical therapy or occupational therapy, or a second professional Master of Science degree in occupational therapy education or occupational therapy administration. Details are given in the bulletin of Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy.

Program of the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

A course of training in the theory and practice of psychoanalytic medicine is offered through the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research of the Department of Psychiatry. The program, a minimum of four years in length, leads to the award of a certificate in Psychoanalysis. For details, see the bulletin of the Center (formerly the Psychoanalytic Clinic).

Programs in Nutrition

The Master of Science program, administered by the Postgraduate Division of the Faculty of Medicine, is a twelve-month program that serves as a foundation for students who plan to continue for the Doctor of Philosophy degree or to attend a professional school in the health sciences. In addition, the master's program is offered to physicians and other health specialists who wish to augment their training with a knowledge of nutrition.

Requirements for admission: a bachelor's degree from an accredited college, with a strong emphasis on the sciences, including two years of chemistry, one year of biology, and a course in elementary biochemistry. The Graduate Record Examination is required.

Under the jurisdiction of the Executive Committee on Graduate Instruction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, students may follow a program of studies leading to the Ph.D. degree. Course work and thesis research in nutritional biochemistry and in clinical and public health nutrition are carried out under the guidance of the Doctoral Program subcommittee on Nutrition.

Requirements for admission: successful completion of the Master of Science degree program as outlined above, or its equivalent, and demonstrated scholarly ability in pursuing advanced studies and research. In addition, students must fulfill the general requirements for the degree which govern all Ph.D. candidates in the University.

A program of postdoctoral training in nutrition is offered for qualified individuals having the degree of Doctor of Medicine or the degree of Doctor of Philosophy who intend to pursue careers in teaching and research in nutrition. The program includes clinics, selected nutrition courses, seminars, and participation in research projects, with a view to qualifying the individual for teaching in medical schools or in nutrition departments of graduate schools. Specific training is given in the areas of nutrition and development, prenatal growth, obesity, endocrinology, and nutrition and metabolism. This program has considerable flexibility and is arranged with the individual to suit his or her particular goals and needs.

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 51

Inquiries concerning the above programs may be directed to the Office of the Director, Institute of Human Nutrition, 701 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Clinical Genetics

While patient services in genetics are rendered through the existing clinical departments of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the teaching, research, and clinical services in genetics are coordinated and integrated by the Program in Clinical Genetics, under the chairmanship of Dr. Arthur Bloom, Professor of Pediatrics and of Human Genetics and Development. The membership of this committee includes physicians and scientists from the Department of Human Genetics and Development and from numerous other departments of the College.

The Program in Clinical Genetics offers fellowships in genetics and training in the genetic aspects of a wide range of medical and surgical specialties. The Program provides postgraduate clinical teaching, elective courses for medical students, and regular conferences on clinical genetics. The clinical and laboratory facilities of the Presbyterian Hospital, Babies Hospital, and other affiliated hospitals are all utilized in the Program, and the research laboratories of the Department of Human Genetics and Development actively participate in it.

Interested applicants should write for further information to the Chairman, Program in Clinical Genetics, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry

The program of study in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, which leads to the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, is under the jurisdiction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Information about admission and degree requirements and courses of instruction is given in the bulletin of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

University Program of General Education

The Program of General Education offers a series of courses designed to bring together various scholarly and professional disciplines to explore matters of lasting human concern and distinct contemporary importance. The Program includes both experimen- tal and time-tested forms of general education. As an outgrowth of Columbia's long experience in this area, the Program is based on the premise that general education can parallel disciplinary training in the graduate as well as undergraduate years. The Program offers intermediate and advanced courses that supplement such general introductions as Contemporary Civilization, Humanities A and B, Oriental Civilizations, and Oriental Humanities.

The Program's courses and seminars are addressed to both the nonspecialist and the specialist who is willing to venture beyond the conventional disciplinary boundaries. Within the normal limits of appropriate class size, and depending upon the level of the course, most courses are open to qualified students from all divisions of the University. Students should check with their department or school if there are questions about receiving credit toward a major or a degree.

A complete listing of courses offered under the Program will be published as a supplement to the University bulletins in the late summer of 1980. It will include courses not otherwise announced in the bulletins. For information, contact the General Educa- tion Program, 1513 International Affairs Building, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 10027. Telephone: (212) 280-2208.

During the 1980-1981 academic year, the Health Sciences Division of the University will conduct a General Education Seminar on the interdisciplinary analysis and explica-

52 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

tion of value issues in health sciences education, research, and service as related to behavior modification, neonatology, reproductive medicine, and other topics. Seminars in each of these topics meet in the autumn and spring terms and are open to students from any division of the University with permission of a faculty participant. For information, call Dr. Arthur Caplan (694-6883) or the General Education Office (280-2208).

Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship

Through the kindness of generous donors, the resources of the Faculty of Medicine include several distinguished lectureships and a visiting professorship:

The Cartwright Lecture Fund, established under the will of Benjamin Cartwright, made possible biennial lectures under the sponsorship of the P&S Alumni Association during the period 1881-1912. A new series of Cartwright Lectures was inaugurated under the College's auspices in November 1974.

The Alexander Ming Fisher Lectures were established under the terms of the will of Dr. A. M. Fisher's half-brother, E. Douglas Southwick, to make possible lectures on the general theme of Death and Dying.

The Michael Heidelberger Lectures were begun in 1955 to honor the notable contribu- tions of Dr. Heidelberger, now Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry, and to stimulate further scientific progress in immunochemistry and related disciplines.

The David Seegal Lectureship and Visiting Professorship Fund, given by the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society and others, provides for the appointment of a visiting professor who is in residence for five days. During this time he or she delivers the David Seegal Lecture on Chronic Disease.

Prizes and Awards

The Distinguished Service Award of the College of Physicians and Surgeons is given annually at Commencement exercises to a member of the faculty for outstanding contributions to medicine.

The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, the recipient of which traditionally gives a public lecture, was established under the will of the late S. Gross Horwitz in honor of his mother and is given annually in recognition of outstanding basic research in the fields of biology or biochemistry.

The Joseph Mather Smith Prize is awarded to the graduate of the College whose original research in medical subjects is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be the most meritorious.

The Stevens Triennial Prize is awarded to the person, not necessarily a graduate of the College, whose original research on any medical subject is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be most meritorious.

Postgraduate Programs

Opportunities for continuing medical education beyond the M.D. degree are offered at the College of Physicians and Surgeons through three major programs; (1) the training of specialists by means of hospital residencies; (2) special courses in general medicine and in the specialties, for practicing physicians and physicians in training who wish to renew and continue their educational experiences in the various fields of medicine; and (3) the Doctor of Medical Science Program, for physicians with particular interest and compe- tence in research in the basic sciences. Further information about these programs may be obtained from the Office of the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine.

Graduate Training of Specialists

The program offers training opportunities through fellowships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and residencies at affiliated hospitals for holders of the M.D. degree. Proper training for specialization includes four major elements. First, it provides a comprehensive clinical experience as a resident in a hospital that is equipped and staffed to provide graded responsibilities under the supervision of experts in the selected specialty. Second, it disciplines the resident in scientific attitudes toward health and disease and enriches the clinical experience through advanced training in those medical sciences that are largely concerned with the resident's specialty. Third, it enables the resident to see and to begin to understand the effect of illness on the individual patient and the response of that person to the illness and to the physician. The relationships that the resident physician develops with individual patients set the pattern for his or her participation in the delivery of health care after the completion of the residency. Finally, it gives the student the opportunity, either as a resident or as a fellow, to do basic or clinical research. This, in turn, may stimulate the type of creative productivity that may earn the student a recommendation for admission to a program leading to the award of the Doctor of Medical Science degree.

Postgraduate Courses for Practicing Physicians and Specialists

A variety of short courses have been organized at hospitals and clinics affiliated with the University; they are available at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and at the other affiliated hospitals. No University credit or certificates are granted for these courses, but continuing medical education credit is granted through the Physicians Recognition Award of the American Medical Association.

Courses for the general practitioner furnish opportunities to keep abreast of new knowledge and the latest methods of diagnosis, treatment, and prevention; and to learn the indications, limitations, and value of those technical procedures that require the attention of a qualified specialist. The instruction consists largely of first-hand clinical experience, lectures, demonstrations, and discussion.

For those already practicing a specialty, advanced instruction is given in the therapeutic and diagnostic methods of certain limited fields of practice. Enrollment is limited to those who have the preparation necessary to enable them to benefit by the advanced instruction.

54 POSTGRADUATE PROGRAMS

Program for the Doctor of Medical Science Degree

The University confers the Med.Sc.D. degree upon a few physicians who have completed a research project in one of the basic science fields. Only staff members of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center are eligible for this degree. A minimum of two years of full-time work in the basic science field is required. Additional requirements include completion of a significant and original research project, the passing of comprehensive and oral examinations and submission of a dissertation.

Departments of Instruction

Listed are only those faculty appointments and promotions approved by September 1, 1980.

The designation "also" is used with the name of an individual holding a joint appointment in two departments. The designation "in" is used when an individual holds an appointment in the department where listed, with assignment to the department named after the "in." In either case, the name appears in both departmental lists.

Anatomy

Professor and Chairman

Michael D. Gershon. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., 1963

Professors

Charles A. Ely. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1946; M.S., Hawaii, 1940; Ph.D.,

Wisconsin, 1949 Melvin L. Moss. B.A., New York University/, 1942; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D.,

1954 Charles R. Noback. B.S., Cornell, 1936; M.S., New York University, 1938; Ph.D.,

Minnesota, 1942 Virginia M. Tennyson (also Pathology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor,

1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Adjunct Professor

Manfred Otto Nahmmacher. Ph.D., Giessen (Germany), 1960

Associate Professors

Ernest W. April. B.S., Tufts, 1961; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969

Philip W. Brandt. B.A., Swarthmore, 1952; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1957; Ph.D., Colum- bia, 1960

Stephen B. Doty (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965

Eladio A. Nunez. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1951; M.S., 1953; Ph.D., New York University, 1964

Karl H. Pfenninger. M.D., Zurich, 1971

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Arline D. Deitch. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1954

Adjunct Associate Professor

Richard M. Hoar. B.A., Dartmouth, 1950; Ph.D., Kansas, 1956

Assistant Professors

Richard T. Ambron. B.S., Villanova, 1965; Ph.D., Temple, 1971

Craig H. Bailey (also Psychiatry). B.A., Lehigh, 1967; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., 1973

Julia R. Currie. B.A., Harvard, 1967; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1974

56 ANATOMY ANESTHESIOLOGY

Halina Den (in Neurology). B.S., Frankfurt, 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954;

Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Abraham B. Eastwood (in Neurology). B.S., Muhlenberg, 1965; M.S., Lehigh, 1967;

Ph.D., 1971 James P. Kelly. B.A., Harpur, 1966; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1971 Daniel M. Linkie (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1962; M.S., State University of New York (Albany), 1963; Ph.D.,

Michigan, 1971 Marie-France Maylie-Pfenninger. Baccalaureate, Algiers, 1960; L. es Sc, Marseilles,

1963; Docteur de Specialite, 1967; Ph.D., 1972 Tuan Due Pham (also Pharmacology). B.S., St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S., Loyola,

1967; M. Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 Taube Pearl Rothman. B.A., City College, 1969; Ph.D., Cornell, 1975 Samuel Mark Schacher (also Psychiatry). B.S., Columbia, 1971; M.A., 1974; Ph.D.,

1976 Michael A. Silver. B.A., Colgate, 1971; Ph.D., Rochester, 1977 Ann- Judith Silverman . B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1 96 7; Ph.D., 1970 Klaudiusz Weiss (also Psychiatry) (in Dentistry). M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State

University of New York (Stony Brook), 1973

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Ian Blair Fries. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTOR

Diane L. Sherman, B.S. Sharon C. Colacino, Ph.D.

Anesthesiology

Professor and Chairman

Henrik H. Bendixen. M.D., Copenhagen, 1951

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland),

1941; M.D., Geneva, 1957 Lester C. Mark. M.D., Toronto, 1941

Gabriel G. Nahas. M.D., Toulouse, 1944; Ph.D., Minnesota, 1953 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Pharmacology). M.B., National Central (Nanking), 1944

Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Leonard Brand. B.S., Yale, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Edgar C. Hanks. B.A., Gettysburg, 1943; M.D., Jefferson, 1947

Ernest Salanitre. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1936; M.D., Rome, 1942

Adjunct Professor

Sidney Spector (also Pharmacology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jeffer- son, 1956

Associate Professors

Ralph A. Epstein. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1963

ANESTHESIOLOGY 57

Allen I. Hyman (also Pediatrics). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical

College, 1959 Hisayo O. Morishima. M.D., Toho (Tokyo), 1951; Ph.D., Tokyo, 1959 Eugene J. Pantuck. B.S., Tufts, 1959; M.D., 1963 Lubos Triner. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1955; Ph.D., 1961

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Richard S. Matteo. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1955

Assistant Professors

Jeffrey Askanazi. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1971; M.D., Upstate Medical

Center (Syracuse), 1975 Keith J. Bernstein. B.A., New York University, 1968; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1974 Richard Z.Y. Chen. M.D., National Taiwan, 1966 Foun-Chung Fan. M.D., Taipei Medical College (Taiwan), 1972 Arthur Donald Finck. B.S., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Peter R. Fletcher. M.A., Oxford, 1974; M.B., Ch.B., Royal College of Physicians

(London), 1974 Warren K. Grodin. B.A., Minnesota, 1967; M.D., London, 1975 John A. Holzer. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1968; M.D., 1972 Hoshang Jal Khambatta. M.D., Karachi, 1958 Vance Lauderdale. B.A., Harvard, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1947 Leila M. Pang (also Pediatrics). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1964 Hilda Pedersen. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1958 David M. Richlin. B.A., Drew, 1970; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1974 Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969;

M.D., Cornell, 1973 J. Gilbert Stone. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1964 Yvonne Vulliemoz. M.S., Lausanne, 1956; Ph.D., Paris, 1969 Sock Young Woo. B.S., Ewha Women's University (Seoul), 1968; M.D., 1972 Jen-Tieng Wung. M.D., Taipei Medical College, 1956

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Ana Maria Lobo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon Faculty of Medicine, 1967

Dorothy A. Black. B.A., Rutgers, 1957; M.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Donald C. Brody. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1956

Kathryn A. W. Cozine. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1961

Ellise S. Delphin. B.A., Barnard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975

Alber Faltas. M.D., Kasr-El-Ainy Medical School (Egypt), 1961

Richard F. Gallagher. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1968; M.D., New York University,

1973 Carolyn P. Greenberg. B.A., Stanford, 1962; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1966 John W. Hennessey. B.S., Massachusetts, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1966 Ina Lieberman. B.A., Barnard, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968 Dudley D. McDaniel. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1971; M.D., Autonoma (Mexico), 1975 Kevin V. Sanborn. B.S., Manhattan, 1969; M.D., New York University, 1973 Medhat Riad Wassef. M.B., B.Ch., Cairo, 1957 Gerald S. Weinberger. M.D., New York University, 1948 Marcelle M. Willock. B.A., New Rochelle, 1958; M.D., Howard, 1962 Joseph Chuan-Shih Yang. B.S., Taiwan, 1959; M.D., Medical Academy (Dusseldorf),

1964

58 ANESTHESIOLOGY

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY

Lee M. Rosenbaum, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Salha S. Daniel, Ph.D. Mariagnes Verosky, B.A. Alvin Wald, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES James C. Dooley, M.A. Annamarie Giangarra,

M.S. Carol Pantuck, B.A. Jeffrey M. Wagner, M.A.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Herbert G. Care. B.A., College o/ the City of New York, 1942; M.D., Howard, 1947

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Elmer S. Foster. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Brussels, 1959 Archibald K. Hinds. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Montpellier,

1962 Gilbert Phanor. B.S., Lycee T. Gilboro, 1953; M.D., Medical School of Haiti, 1960 Madisetti Swamy. M.B., B.S., Osmania (India), 1954 J. Sinclair Trimiar. B.S., Howard, 1960; D.D.S., 1960 Francis Weekes. B.S., Johnson C Smith, 1941; D.D.S., Meharry, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Samuel C. Brisbane. B.A., Lincoln, 1937; M.D., Howard, 1949 Oscar N. Graves. B.A., Lincoln, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1949

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

John Rocco Calabro. B.S., Manhattan, 1971; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine

and Dentistry, 1975 Henry A. Connolly, Jr. B.S., Fordham, 1951; M.D., Hamburg, 1955 Demetrios B. Kalas. M.D., Aristotelian, 1954 Mary Louise White. B.S., Maryland, 1943; M.D., 1945

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY Sami A.M. Abadir, M.D. Jane deV. Stark, M.D. Carol E. Zimmerman, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Assistant Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Ennio Gallozzi. M.D., Rome, 1953

Joseph lacovelli. B.A., Buffalo, 1952; M.D., Bologna, 1958

Ronald A. Andree. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1955; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1959

ANESTHESIOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY 59

Assistant Clinical Professors

Errol N. Harding. B.A., M.D., CM., McGill, 1949 AinoTuul. M.D., Tartu (Estonia), 1942

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Gugliclmina Bettini, M.D. Byung Yang Kim, M.D.

Hilda H.C. Liu, M.D. Zdan J. Korduba, M.D.

Alfred T.C. Peng, M.D. Han Chiang Lee, M.D.

Altagracia H. Polanco, M.D. Ignacio U. Ngo, M.D.

Kyaw Nyunt, M.S., B.S.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY Kenneth A. Rothenberg, M.D.

Julio M. Garcia-Rodriguez, M.D. Kristappa Sangavaram, M.D.

Biochemistry

Robert Wood Johnson, Jr., Professor and Chairman

Isidore S. Edelman. B.A., Indiana, 1941; M.D., 1944

University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director of the Institute of Cancer Research). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S., Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1944

Professors

Richard Axel (also Pathology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 Reinhold Benesch. B.Sc, Leeds, 1941; M.Sc, 1945; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1950 Ruth E. Benesch. B.Sc, London, 1946; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1951 Max A. Eisenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1938; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D.,

Duke, 1950 Philip Feigelson. B.S., Queens, 1947; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1951

Arthur Karlin (also Neurology). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Alvin I. Krasna. B.A., Yeshiva, 1950; Ph.D. Columbia, 1955 Seymour Lieberman (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S.,

Illinois, 1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941 Barbara W. Low. B.A., Oxford, 1942; M.A., 1946; D. Phil, 1948 Maurice M. Rapport (in Psychiatry). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940;

Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1946 Parithychery Srinivasan. B.Sc, Madras, 1946; Ph.D., 1953

Adjunct Professor

Benno P. Schoenborn. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1958; Ph.D., New South Wales (Australia), 1962

Associate Professors

Roger M. Burnett. B.Sc, The Polytechnic (London), 1964; Ph.D., Purdue, 1970 Allen M. Gold. B.A., Chicago, 1950; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Dezider Grunberger (also Public Health). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; Sc.D., 1968

Adjunct Associate Professor

John D. Karkas. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

60 BIOCHEMISTRY DERMATOLOGY

Senior Research Associate

David Elwyn (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

George Alexander (in Psychiatry). B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953

Frederick W. Alt. B.S., Brandeis, 1971; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978

Hagen P. Bayley. B.Sc, Oxford, 1974; Ph.D., Harvard, 1979

Stephen Goff. B.A., Amherst, 1973; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978

Irving Goodman (in Surgery). B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., 1944

Lee Makowski. B.S., Brown, 1971; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1973; Ph.D., 1976 Herbert L. Meltzer (in Psychiatry). B.S., Long Island, 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950 James L. Roberts (in International Institute for Study of Human Reproduction). B.S.,

Colorado State, 1973; Ph.D., Oregon, 1977 Kamil Ugurbil. Ph.D., Columbia, 1977 Bonnie Ann Wallace. Ph.D., Yale, 1977

ASSOCIATE

Carola P. Zimmerman, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Martha Redden Kimball,

Ph.D. Jade Li, Ph.D. Sahebarao Mahadik,

Ph.D. (in Psychiatry) Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.

(in Obstetrics and

Gynecology) Alicia M. Spencer, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Karen A. Bucher, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Duane L. Guernsey Susanna Yung Kwong,

M.S. Venkitachalem P. Mohan,

Ph.D. James Pachence, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Erwin Chargaff, M.D. Zacharias Dische, M.D.

Ophthalmology) Karl Meyer, M.D. (in

Ophthalmology) David Nachmansohn,

M.D. (in Neurology) David B. Sprinson, M.D

(in

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Adjunct Associate Professor

Theodore Peters, Jr. (in Medicine). B.S., Lehigh, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1950

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Leonard A. Sauer. M.D., Rochester, 1961; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1966

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Venkitachalem P. Mohan, Ph.D. Utapalendu S. Maitra, Ph.D.

Dermatology

Professor and Chairman

Leonard C. Harber. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., New York University, 1953

DERMATOLOGY 61

At Presbyterian Hospital

Clinical Professors

Saul L. Sanders. B.A., Kenyan, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1952 Dorothy Windhorst. B.A., Chicago, 1948; M.D., 1954

Associate Professors

Richard L. Edelson. B.A., Hamilton, 1966; M.D., Yale, 1970

Margarita S. Hutner. B.A., Puerto Rico, 1936; M.A., Harvard, 1945; Ph.D., 1952

Associate Professor of Clinical Dermatology

Maureen B. Poh. B.S., Siena, 1964; M.D., Tennessee, 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

Jack Eisert. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., State University of New York, 1956 David N. Silvers (also Pathology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968 Richard A. Walzer. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Assistant Professors

Alan D. Andrews. B.S., Illinois, 1968; M.D., Virginia, 1972 Robert B. Armstrong. B.A., Haverford, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973 William De Pietro. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1972; M.D., George- town, 1976 Irene E. Kochevar. Ph.D., Michigan State, 1970 Robert R. Walther. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., North Carolina, 1973

Assistant Clinical Professors

Irving Abrahams. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New

York, 1954 Vincent S. Beltrani. B.A., Brooklyn, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Marc E. Grossman. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1970; M.D.,

Pennsylvania, 1974 Eric W. Herman. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1972; M.D., Mt. Sinai,

1976 Einar A. Juhlin. B.S., Illinois, 1950; M.D., Royal Charles (Sweden), 1957 Theodore A. Labow. B.S., Miami, 1951; M.D., Tufts, 1955 Jack H. Rozen. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1958; M.D., 1962 Gregory Zalar. B.S., George Washington, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

William G. Atwood, M.D. Steven R. Kohn, M.D. Paul Ira Schneiderman,

M.D. Eugene W. Sweeney, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Carole L. Berger, Ed.D. Shinichiro Takezaki, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Leon K. Demar, M.D. Robert P. Feinstein, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Jeiiery S. Kezis, M.D. Joseph A. Penner, M.D. Douglas Pravda, M.D. Joseph S. Shapiro, M.D. Luis A. Suarez, M.D. Harvey I. Weinberg, M.D. Lawrence M. Wells

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY Timothy J. Corey, M.D. William J. Cunningham,

M.D. Joan P. Noroff, M.D. Margaret S. Ravits, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Anthony C. Chu, M.B., B.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATE Francis P. Gasparro, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER

J. Lowry Miller, M.D.

LECTURERS

Arturo L. Carrion, M.D.

Angelo A. Lamola, Ph.D.

62 DERMATOLOGY HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT

At St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Alexander W. Young, Jr. B.S., Maryland, 1944; M.D., 1946

Assistant Clinical Professor

Peter C. Lombardo. B.S., Rochester, 1955; M.D., Albany, 1959

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Herbert H. Hochman Joshua S. Berger, M.D.

David Sibulkin, M.D. Stanley J. Lewis, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY Elaine V. DiGrande, M.D.

Human Genetics and Development

Professor and Acting Chairman

Arthur Bank (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., 1960

University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director, Institute of Cancer Research). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S., Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1944

Professors

Kimball C. Atwood. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., New York University, 1946 Arthur D. Bloom (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., New York University,

1960 Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (see Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A.,

Boston, 1949; M.D. , Tufts, 1955 Elvin A. Kabat (also Microbiology) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New

York, 1932; M. A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Paul A. Marks (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1949 Orlando J. Miller (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950 Richard A. Rifkind (also Medicine). B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Professor of Mathematical Statistics and Genetics

Howard Levene (in Biological Sciences and Mathematical Statistics). B.A., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Columbia, 1947

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

L. Erlenmyer-Kimling. B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1960 John D. Rainer. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.A., 1944; M.D., 1951

Adjunct Professors

Sidney Udenfriend. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; Ph.D., New York

University, 1948 Arthur Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1947; Ph.D., Columbia,

1953 Herbert Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; Ph.D., George

Washington, 1957

HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT MEDICINE 63

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Dorothy Warburton. B.S., McGill, 1957; Ph.D., 1961

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ronald H. Kaback. B.A., Haverford, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein College of Medicine,

1962 Michael Ian Sherman. B.S.C., McGill, 1965; Ph.D., State University of New York

(Stony Brook), 1969 David Webb. B.A., California State, 1966; M.A., 1968; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Senior Research Associates

Harold I. Calvin (in International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduc- tion). B.A., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1964 Fred R. Kramer. B.S., Michigan, 1964; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1969 Dorothy A. Miller. B.A., Wilson, 1952; Ph.D., Yale, 1957 Donald R. Mills. B.A., Indiana, 1962; M.A., 1964; Ph.D., Illinois, 1968

Assistant Professors

Ann S. Henderson. B.S., Winthrop, 1960; Ph.D., North Carolina, 1966 Debra Wolgemuth. B.A., Gettysburg, 1969; M.A., Vanderbilt, 1971; M. Phil., Colum- bia, 1975; Ph.D., 1977

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATES LECTURER

Jye-Siung Fang, Ph.D. Amy S. Bairn, Ph.D. Jerard Hurwitz, Ph.D.

Harlow K. Fischman, Ye-Chin Choi, Ph.D. Ph..D.

Medicine

Professor of Clinical Medicine and Acting Chairman

Thomas Q. Morris. B.A., Notre Dame, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Arthur Bank (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D.,

Harvard, 1960 J. Thomas Bigger, Jr. (also Pharmacology). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Vincent P. Butler, Jr. B.A., St. Peter's, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Robert E. Canfield. B.S., Lehigh, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1957 Paul J. Cannon. B.A., Holy Cross, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958

Rose R. Ellison (in the Cancer Center). B.A., Barnard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1948 Andrew G. Frantz. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 DeWitt S. Goodman (Tilden-Weger-Bieler Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D.,

1955 Rejane M. Harvey. B.A., Vassar, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943 John N. Loeb. B.A., Harvard, 1957; M.D., 1961 Paul A. Marks (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D.,

1949 Harold C. Neu (also Pharmacology). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1960

64 MEDICINE

Hymie L. Nossel. M.B., Ch.D., Cape Town, 1953; Ph.D., Oxon, 1962

Elliott F. Osserman (American Cancer Society Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1945;

M.D., 1947 Benvenuto Pernis (also Microbiology). M.D., Milan, 1947 Richard A. Rifkind (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D.,

Columbia, 1955 John V. Taggart (also Physiology). M.D., Southern California, 1940 Donald F. Tapley. B.S., Acadia, 1948; M.D., Chicago, 1952 Gerard M. Turino. B.A., Princeton, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1948 I. Bernard Weinstein (also Public Health). B.S., Wisconsin, 1951; M.D., 1955 Arthur R. Wertheim. B.A., Dartmouth, 1935; M.D., Jefferson, 1939

Professors of Clinical Medicine

Felix E. Demartini. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1946

M. Irene Ferrer. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941

Donald A. Holub. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1952

Edgar Leifer. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., Columbia, 1939;

Ph.D., 1941; M.D., 1946 Robert Palmer. B.A., Oberlin, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957

Professor of Social Medicine

Robert J. Weiss (also Psychiatry). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Clinical Professors

Stuart W. Cosgriff. B.A., Holy Cross, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942 John R. Edsall. B.A., Cambridge, 1945; M.B., B.Ch., 1948 Kermit L. Pines. B.A., Columbia, 1937; M.D., 1942 John A. Wood. B.A., Harvard, 1943; M.D., 1946

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Physiology). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1952

Leslie Baer. B.A., Wisconsin, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

John P. Bilezikeian. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Peter R. B. Caldwell. B.A., Dartmouth, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958

Leonard Chess. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1964; M.D., State

University of New York (Downstate), 1968 Robert M. Glickman. A.B., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 Michael M. Stewart. A.B., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Yale Enson. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1953 Robert H. Heisenbuttel. B.A., Thiel, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963 Wylie C. Hembree, III (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960;

M.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1964 George W. Melcher, Jr. B.A., Colorado, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946 Jane H. Morse. B.A., Smith, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 James A. Reiffel. B.A., Duke, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Frank R. Smith. B.A., Dartmouth, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Joseph G. Sweeting. B.S., Holy Cross, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1956

MEDICINE 65

Henry M. Thomas, III. B.A., Haverford, 1950; M.D., 1957

Melvin B. Weiss. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1962; M.D., State

University of New York (Downstate), 1967 Robert T. Whitlock. B.A., North Carolina, 1950; M.D., 1957

Associate Clinical Professors

Ralph S. Blume. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

John O. Burris. B.S., Wyoming, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1956

Peter A. Gross. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Yale, 1964

Lionel Grossbard. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

George A. Hyman. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., 1945

Abbie I. Knowlton. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

William Lovejoyr B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1962

David J. McConnell. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., Yale, 1962

George H. McCormack, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Jay I. Meltzer. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Hans Neuberg. B.A., Wagner, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Richard J. Stock. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947

Earl A. Wheaton, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Assistant Professors

Gerald B. Appel. B.A., Cornell, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Conrad B. Blum. B.S., Northwestern, 1969; M.D., 1971

Thomas A. Brasitus. B.A., Connecticut, 1967; M.D., Jefferson, 1971

Randolph Cole. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1973

Oliver T. Fein. B.A., Swarthmore, 1962; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1967

Steven M. Friedman. B.A., Princeton, 1968; M.D., Cornell, 1972

Glenda J. Garvey. B.A., Wellesley, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Elsa-Grace V. Giardina. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., New York Medical College,

1965 Howard J. Goldsweig. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1970 Steven Grant. M.D., Mt. Sinai Medical School, 1973 Peter Green. M.B., B.S., Sydney, 1970 James P. Halper. A.B., Columbia, 1965; M.D., 1971 Karen L. Kaplan. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1963; M.D., Ph.D., Chicago, 1969 Hugh Nellans (also Physiology). B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971 Allen Bryant Nichols. B.A., Yale, 1961; M.D., Virginia, 1971 Juan Oliver. B.A., Bachiller Institute, 1961; M.D., Barcelona (Spain), 1967 Martin W. Oster. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971 John Owen. B.ScM., McMaster (Ontario) 1972; M.D., 1974 Constance Park. B.A., Radcliffe, 1974; M.S., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein,

1974 Marjorie Perloff. B.A., Bennington, 1965; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1969 Eric R. Powers. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., Harvard, 1974 Frederick G. Rapoport. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Stanley H. Rosenbaum. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969; M.D., Cornell,

1973 William H. Sherman (also Anesthesiology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1967; M.D.,

Jefferson, 1969 Ethel S. Siris. A.B., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Mark B. Stoopler. M.D., Cornell, 1975 Alan R. Tall. M.B., B.S., Sydney (Australia), 1970 Francis M. Weld. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

66 MEDICINE

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Lester W. Blair. M.D., Columbia, 1974

David K. Blood. B.A., Amherst, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Norma M.T.W. Braun. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Peter Buchin. B.S., Williams, 1970; M.D., Yale, 1974

Robert H. DeBellis. B.S., Queens, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Ronald E. Drusin. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Dorothy Estes. B.C., Wheaton (Massachusetts), 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Kenneth C. Fine. M.D., Catholic (Louvain, Belgium), 1970

Mark J. Goldberger. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Thomas P. Jacobs. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1968

Lynne L. Johnson. B.A., Wellesley, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Rafael A. Lantigua. M.D., Autonomous (Santo Domingo), 1972

Oscar Lebwohl. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1972

Robert McConnell. B.A., Hamilton, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Robin O. Motz. B.A., Columbia, 1959; Ph.D., 1965; M.D., 1975

Carmen Ortiz-Neu. B.A., Wellesley, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Kenneth M. Prager. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1968

Marshall Primack. B.A., Louisville, 1961; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1965

Edith B. Reilly. B.A., Smith, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

John L. Roglieri. B.A., B.S., Lehigh, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1966

Martin J. Saltzman. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1972 Harvey A. Schneier. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1967 Peter E. Schrag. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., 1964 Allan Schwartz. B.S., City College, 1967; M.S., Harvard, 1968; M.D., Columbia,

1974 Alan H. Seplowitz. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., 1972 Joseph Tenenbaum. B.A., Brandeis, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1974 Byron Thomashow. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

Jack B. Weissman. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Harvard, 1970 Gail S. Williams. B.A., Wellesley, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Elizabeth R. Prichard. B.A., Adelphi, 1943; M.S., New York School of Social Work, 1947

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alfred Becker. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Michael H. Cohen. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1961; M.D., 1965

Clarence J. D' Alton. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Richard B. Duane, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Juan G. Edreira. M.D., Havana, 1951

Daniel L. Larson. M.D., Columbia, 1946

Arnold Lisio. B.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1961

Daniel L. Macken. B.A., Holy Cross, 1955; M.D., Boston, 1960

Michael P. Parry. B.A., Yale, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

John Postley. B.A., Yale, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968

Nicholas Rango. B.S., St. Louis, 1966; M.D., Northwestern, 1970

Arthur I. Snyder. B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1950

Jeffrey A. Stein. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Cornelius J. Tyson. B.A., Princeton, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Assistant Clinical Professor of Social Medicine

Eric R. Marcus (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969

MEDICINE 67

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Marcia B. Bull, M.D.

John M. Daley, M.D.

Elias M. Kaimakliotis,

M.D. Edward B. Leahey, Jr.,

M.D. Robert Lewy, M.D. Alan L. Saroff, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN SOCIAL MEDICINE

Arthur L. Caplan, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Steven Birken, Ph.D. Joseph Cerreta, Ph.D. Rose D'Alisa, Ph.D. Paul Ehrlich, Ph.D. Lloyd Fleisher, Ph.D. James Kochn, Ph.D. Bonnie Bray, M.D. Chung Y. Liu, Ph.D. Mohammed M. Osman,

D.V.M. Ildiko Radichevich, Ph.D. Michael Schonberg Robert R. Sciacca, M.S. John E. Smith, Ph.D. George Taliadovros, M.D. Larry D. Witte, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Howard J. Barnum, M.D. Eli Bauman, M.D. Louis D. Carmichael, M.D. Herbert Chase, Jr., M.U.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Paul Huai Chen, M.D. Jorge Cortes-Quinones,

M.D. Ann P. D'Adamo, M.D. Arthur R. DeSimone, M.D. Michael Goldman, M.D. Victoria E. Guy, M.D. Lonnie B. Hanauer, M.D. Ralph Herz, Jr., M.D. Oscar Irigoyen, M.D. Yvonne E. Johnson, M.D. Constantine P.

Ladapoulos, M.D. Pamela Ann Lawrence,

M.D. Raymond Lippert, M.D. Robert M. Magrisso, M.D. Pier Mancusi-Ungaro,

M.D. Aaron Manson, M.D. Marcia Naveh, M.D. Eduardo R. Pons, Jr.,

M.D. Jane S. Sillman, M.D. Richard V. Sims, III, M.D. David B. Sutter, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

James A. Coss, Jr., M.D. Helen-Ann Garcia, M.D. Joseph Heller, M.D. John E. McWhorter, M.D. Mato L. Marinovich, M.D. Milovan T. Rakic, M.D. John M. Rodgers, M.D. Richard H. Runser, M.D. Adele Tedeschi, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Margaret Wilihite, M.A. Joan Sobel, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Lieselotte Aron-Hott,

Ph.D. Deborah L. Brennan, B.S. Joseph M. Cerreta, Ph.D. Mary Dalecki, B.A. Michael Drillings, M.S. Doris Tse Eng, B.A. Sylvia H. Ford, B.S. Donald L. Gammon, B.S. Michelle Greene, M.A. Amalia Hanoch, M.S. Michamasa Kato, Ph.D. Masanobu Kawakami,

M.D. Kalliope S. LaGamma,

B.S.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Henry Aranow, Jr., M.D. Hylan A. Bickerman, M.D. Andre F. Cournand, M.D. Albert Lamb, M.D. Hamilton Southworth,

M.D. Alfred Steiner, M.D.

LECTURERS

Nicholas Christy, M.D. Edward E. Fischel, M.D. Eric S. Lichtenstein, M.D. John H. McClement, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

John S. Davis. B.A., Hamilton, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Walter Franck. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D. , Columbia, 1954

Herbert J. Marx. B.E.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1954; M.D Columbia 1960

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Peter L. Arquin. M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1972

Emery C. Herman. B.A., Emory, 1949; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1953

Gary S. Hoffman. B.A., Harpur, 1964; M.S., Howard, 1967; M.D., Medical College of

Virginia, 1971 Richard J. Horner. B.A., Dartmouth, 1966; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Alan J. Kozak. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., 1969

68 MEDICINE

Don V. Lewis. B.A., North Carolina, 1967; M.D., 1971

William H. Mook. B.A., Wesleyan, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

David S. Pratt. B.A., New Hampshire, 1967; M.D., Tufts, 1971

Allan G. Ramsay. B.A., Western Ontario, 1947; M.D., 1948

William H. Ramsey. B.A., Dartmouth, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Richard E. Reese. B.A., Dartmouth, 1965; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Dennis A. Savoie. B.A., Providence, 1967; M.D., Vermont, 1971

Robert S. Sioussat. B.A., Wesleyan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951

William Streck. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968;M.D., Missouri, 1973

David S. Svahn. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1960; M.D., Columbia,

1965 David W. Vaules. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; B.M.S., 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1963 Gary Weaver. B.A., Goshen, 1964; M.D., Kansas, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professor

Donald O. Pollock. B.A., Hamilton, 1951; M.D., Harvard, 1955

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

MEDICINE MEDICINE

Carolyn I. Mook, M.D. Carole L. Nunamaker, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professors

John Lindenbaum. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1959 Gerald E. Thomson. B.S., Queens, 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959

Clinical Professors

Harold S. Ballard. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1948; M.D., Meharry, 1952 Kenneth Sterling. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

David Jocelyn Clain. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1959; M.D., 1968 Charles P. Felton. B.Sc, Xavier, 1949; M.D., Geneva, 1956

Associate Clinical Professors

George C. Branche. B.A., Bowdoin, 1944; M.D., Boston, 1948

John B. Cromie. M.D., Belfast (Northern Ireland), 1949

William R. Cunnick, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Jeanne A. Smith. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957

Charles M. Yergan. B.S., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947

Assistant Professors

Anne M. Briscoe. M.A., Vassar, 1945; Ph.D., Yale, 1949 Thomas J. Garrett. M.D., Queen's (Ontario), 1971

Clayton L. Natta (in Pathology). B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1957; M.D., Toronto, 1961

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Diego Xavier Alvarez. B.S., Manhattan, 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1972

MEDICINE 69

Jay Brown. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968

Peter C. T. Dickinson. B.S., McGill, 1958; M.D., 1962

Jay Franklin Dobkin. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1972

Donald A. Feinfeld. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Kenneth J. Herwig. B.A., Syracuse, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1971

Wanda Devora Huff. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., Yale, 1973

Steven Z. Kussin. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

Marvin C. Cooper. B.S., Queens, 1960; M.D., St. Louis, 1965 Milena L. Lewis. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Richard R. Prouty. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1948

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

John C. DiJohn, M.D. Pearl D. Foster, M.D. Paul Killian, M.D. Anthony J. Marano, M.D. James J. Rafter, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

James T. T. Chien, M.D. Bennie W. Chiles, M.D. Carl A. Garnier, M.D. Major Geer, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Michael H. Gordon, M.D. Ross T. Hamilton, M.D. James H. Hubert, M.D. Herbert Knight, M.D. Thomas J. Mattimore,

M.D. Clarence S. Murray, M.D. Luigi M.F. Negri, M.D. Hazeline M. Nurse, M.D. Ruth C. Onukwue, M.D. Velvie Anne Poque Jon Rothenberg, M.D. William J. Schwartz, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Eric J. Vanderbush, M.D. Michael D. Williams, M.D. Lewis Z. Wright, Jr., M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Raynard J. McDonald,

M.D. Douglas Miller, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER Cecil G. Marquez, M.D.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine and Director of Regional Bone Center

Robert Lindsay. M.P.CB., Glasgow, 1968; Ph.D., 1969

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine and Director of Internal Medicine

Albert S. Klainer. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts, 1961

Assistant Clinical Professor

Joseph Ryan. B.S., Notre Dame, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1970

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Jack Butterworth, M.D. Oscar Kruesi, M.D. John Thompson, M.D.

70 MEDICINE

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professors

Michael Bernstein. M.D., New York Medical College, 1953

William F. Minogue. B.S., Seton Hall, 1951; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine

John J. Gregory. B.S., Worcester Pol\/techr\ic Institute, 1953; M.D., Albany, 1961

Associate Clinical Professor (Family Practice)

Donald F. Kent. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1935; M.D., 1940

Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine (Family Practice)

Richard N. Podell. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joel L. Duberstein. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Robert A. Fuhrman. B.A., Clark, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966

Mary T. Herald. B.A., New Rochelle, 1965; M.D., New Jersey College oi Medicine

and Dentistry, 1969 William N. Toth. B.S., Georgetown, 1956; M.D., Hahnemann, 1960

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Stephen J. Fischl, M.D. Peter Goodluck, M.D. William A. Tansey III, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Kevin E. Bell, M.D. Donald J. Brock, M.D. H. Oliver Brown, Jr., M.D. Kopel Burk, M.D. Charles W. Clarke, Jr.,

M.D. Andrew Coronato, Jr.,

M.D. H. William Diefendorf,

M.D. Charles E. Dooley, Jr.,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

John T. Farry, M.D. Robert B. Francis, M.D. Sidney E. Friedman, M.D. Samuel M. Gray, M.D. Thomas V. Inglesby, M.D. Robert P. Margie, M.D. Sanford M. Reiss, M.D. Melvin Rubinstein, M.D. R. Gregory Sachs, M.D. Robert R. Springer, M.D. Michael Suhl, M.D. Michael J. Tighe, M.D. Burton Tucker, M.D. William E. Wagner, Jr.,

M.D. Richard M. Weinberg,

M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Joseph Belladonna, M.D. Joseph T. Faraldo, M.D. Eugene R. Kelly, M.D. Michael B. Kerner, M.D. A. Ralph Kristeller, M.D. David P. Miller, M.D. Lawrence J. Nastro, M.D. Steven J. Stanzione, M.D. David Allen Worth, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors

A. L. Loomis Bell. B.S., Wesleyan, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947 John F. Bertles. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1952 Peter R. Holt. B.Sc, Tolington, 1949; M.B., B.S., London, 1954 Gerald B. Phillips. B.A., Princeton, 1946; M.D., Harvard, 1948

MEDICINE 71

Theodore B. Van Itallie. B.S., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1945 Harvey J. Weiss. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

William S. Clark. B.S., Dayton; M.D., St. Louis, 1938

Stanley Cortell. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts,

1961 Michael H. Grieco. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1957 A. Gregory Jameson. B.A., Harvard, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1950 Richard N. Pierson, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Clinical Professors

Philip H. Hennemann. B.A., Harvard, 1943; M.D., 1946

Miles J. Schwartz. B.S., Queens (New York), 1947; M.D., New York University, 1961

Associate Professors

Robert B. Case. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1958 William Rosner. B.A., Wisconsin, 1954; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1961 F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer. B.A., Oberlin, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Edward M. Dwyer III. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Harvey G. Kemp. B.A., Oklahoma, 1955; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1959

Marianne J. Legato. B.A., Manhattanville, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1962

Alice Maniatis. M.D., Athens, 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard P. Ames. B.A., Williams, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Albert Attia. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.D., 1958

C. Redington Barrett. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

James M. Goldstone. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Albert W. Grokoest. B.S., Hamilton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Saul Kaplan. B.S., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Tennessee, 1959

Arthur Karanas. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1958 Richard McCray. B.A., Wesleyan, 1954; B.D., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Bruce H. Pinkernell. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1960; M.D., 1964 Henry G. Schaffeld. B.A., Columbia, 1938; M.D., 1941 Lawrence Scharer. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958

Myron C. Wright. B.A., Dartmouth, 1937; M.D., New York University, 1940 Herman Ziffer. B.A., Brooklyn, 1949; M.D., Chicago, 1953

Senior Research Associate

Beatrice M. Fairchild. B.A., Hunter, 1942; M.A., Bryn Mawr, 1943; Ph.D., 1948

Assistant Professors

Richard Collens. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; M.D., New York University, 1966

72 MEDICINE

Donald Philip Kotler. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973

Michelle P. Warren (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). A.B., Mount Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Judith Axelrod. B.S., Wellesley, 1963; M.D., Cornell, 1967 Robert S. Bernstein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., Harvard, 1965 Le Clair Bissell. B.A., Colorado, 1955; M.D., 1958 Jeffrey M. Brensilver. M.D., Columbia, 1971

Norman A. Cagin. B.S., Rutgers, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967 Airlee A.C. Cameron. B.A., Radcliffe, 1957; M.D., CM., McGill, 1961 Richard Gunnar Carlson. B.S., Trinity, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Gertrude Scott Lefavour. B.A., Goucher, 1965; M.D., Medical College of Pennsylva- nia, 1970 Arthur J. Lennon. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Michael Longe. M.D., Toronto, 1968

Jonathan A. Lorch. B.A., Wisconsin, 1968; M.D.,Tulane, 1972 Jean W. Saleh. B.A., St. Joseph (Beirut), 1957; M.D., Faculte Francaise de Medicin,

1964 Seiichi Shimomura. M.D., Okayama (Japan), 1945 William J. Vicic. B.S., Yale, 1966; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors

Samir E. Alam. B.S., American (Beirut), 1968; M.D., 1972

William J. Athos. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1956 Robert S. Beekman. B.A., Harvard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943 Harvey Benovitz. B.A., Washington & Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Carlton Boxhill. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968 Earl B. Brown . B.S., Emory, 1 938; M.D., 1 942 Donald P. Dallas. B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1954

George Dermksian. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.A., 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 Robert K. Emy. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.D., Jefferson, 1951 James A. Feltman. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1944 Stanley R. Fine. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1957 James B. Gabriel. B.A., Brown, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1949 Oscar R. Garfein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., 1965 Zane Gaut. B.S., Birmingham Southern, 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 Richard Geltman. B.A., Rutgers, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971 Henry M. Greenberg. B.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1968 Joseph A. Grossman. B.S., City College of New York, 1953; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1957 Julian B. Hyman. A.B., Columbia, 1945; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1947 John H. Keating. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1943 Donald Kraft. B.S., Michigan, 1966; M.D., Cincinnati, 1970 David K. Meriney. B.A., Duke, 1956; M.D., 1960 William M. Nicholas. B.A., Williams, 1950; M.D., State University of New York

(Syracuse), 1954 Myron C. Patterson. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1943 Edward H. Reisner. B.A., Columbia, 1935; M.D., 1939 Robert B. Roven. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957

Morton Schwimmer. B.A., Lafayette (Pennsylvania), 1948; M.D., Jefferson, 1951 Kenneth N. Weinstein. B.A., Vermont, 1955; M.D., New York University, 1959 Gerald Weintraub. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954

MEDICINE MICROBIOLOGY 73

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

MEDICINE

Charles A. Adsit, M.D.

Kenneth A. Altman, M.D.

Wendy Aronson, M.D.

Jose L. Barbosa Saldivar,

M.D. Robert Bernot, M.D. John Thomas Cappadona,

M.D. Paul J. Chrzanowski, M.D. Albert Cohen, M.D. Edward W.D. Colt, M.D. James Ducey, M.D. Martin Jay Frankel, M.D. Eugene Freundlich, M.D. Francis G. Geer, M.D. Maurice F. Goodbody,

M.D. Barry E. Goozner, M.D. William S. Hopewell, M.D. Michael Robinson Irwin,

M.D. Herbert Ivan Jernow,

M.D. Annetta J. Kimball, M.D. Robert P. Lombardo, M.D. Allen Mogtader, M.D. Thomas M. Nail, M.D. John J. Olichney, M.D. Eugene Santilli, M.D. Nicholas Steiner, M.D. Thomas Tamlyn, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Mukul Kumar Basu, Ph.D. M. Saeed Khan, Ph.D. Bruce R. Lages, M.D. Mohan Muthireval Reddy

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Eric Andreae, M.D. Vernon G. Baker, M.D. Lestrino C. Baquiran,

M.D. Michael S. Baum, M.D. Michael Borecky, M.D. Jeffrey N. Bradshaw,

M.D. Cecil B. Broderick, M.D. David Stewart Carroll,

M.D. John Cohn, M.D. John Cornwall, M.D. High C. Davidson, M.D. Margaret Dessau, M.D. Rusina B. Dixon, M.D. Jerome Paul Ehrlich, M.D. Jeanne Fastook, M.D. James W. Fingerhut, M.D. Donald R. Fishman, M.D. Dulaney Glen, M.D. Carolyn E. Goodstein,

M.D. Antoine C. Harovas, M.D. Katherine A. Hawkins,

M.D. Sheila Joy Herscovitch,

M.D. Karl R. Hoffman, M.D. Peter L. Hofmann, M.D. Mitchell Kahn, M.D. Martin Philip Kasofsky,

M.D. Edith Joan Langner, M.D. David Loft, M.D. Athanasios Mallios, M.D. Alfred Miller, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Lawson Auburn Moyer,

III, M.D. Lazare Novack, M.D. Anthony J. Pepe, M.D. Martin Saul Pine, M.D. Ernest C. Richards, M.D. Thomas D. Robinson,

M.D. Harry A. Roselle, M.D. Nicholas J. Rummo, M.D. Thomas Clark Scanlan,

M.D. Clyde N. Schechter, M.D. Howard N. Schwartz,

M.D. Mark V. Sherrid, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Dennis George Huskins, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Thalia Boussios, Ph.D. Hisham F. Nakshbendi,

B.S. Katherine P. Porikos,

Ph.D. Frank J. Puma Jack Wang, M.S. Mei-Uih Yang, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER David Schwimmer, M.D.

LECTURER

Marcelle Lavau, Ph.D.

Microbiology

John E. Borne Professor and Chairman

Harold S. Ginsberg. B.A., Duke, 1937; M.D., Tulane, 1941

Professors

Paul D. EUner (also Pathology). B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.D., Southern California,

1952; Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 Bernard F. Erlanger. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.A., New York

University, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1951 Gabriel S. Godman (also Pathology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Elvin A. Kabat (also Human Genetics) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New

York, 1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937

74 MICROBIOLOGY

Wladyslaw Manski (in Ophthalmology). M. Phil., Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw,

1951 Benvenuto Pernis (also Medicine). M.D., Milan, 1947 Henry J. Vogel (in Pathology). B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941

Professor of Oral Biology

Solon A. Ellison. B.S., Columbia, 1942; D.D.S., 1946; Ph.D., 1958

Adjunct Professor

Louis H. Muschel. Ph.D., 1953

B.S., New York, 1936; A.M., Columbia, 1938; M.S., Yale, 1951;

Adjunct Associate Professor

Victor Bokkenheuser. M.D., Copenhagen, 1945

Associate Professors

Dean L. Engelhardt. B.S., Amherst, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1967 Saul J. Silverstein. B.S., Cornell, 1968; Ph.D., Florida, 1971

Assistant Professors

David H. Figurski. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1969; Ph.D., Rochester, 1974

Ramareddy V. Guntaka. B.S., Andhra (India), 1963; M.Sc, Agra (India), 1965; Ph.D.,

Kansas, 1970 David S. Hodes (also Pediatrics). B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Christine A. Milcarek. B.S., Duquesne, 1968; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1972 Sherie L. Morrison. B.A., Stanford, 1963; Ph.D., 1966 Charles S.H. Young. B.A., Oxford, 1966; D. Phil., 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Yvonne A. Lue. Ph.D., Columbia, 1976

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Norbert H. Wasserman, Eng.Sc.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Louise A. Goode, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Sergio Biguzzi, M.D. Harriet Castleman, B.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES {continued)

William L. Cleveland,

Ph.D. Paul Fisher, Ph.D. Ulla Lindholm, Ph.D. Judyta Praszkier, Ph.D. Arepalli S. Rao, Ph.D. Shunji Sugii, Ph.D. Giampaolo Tonda

STAFF ASSOCIATES {continued) Albert Ming-Tao Wu, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Charles L. Fox, Jr., M.D. Konrad C. Hsu, Ph.D. Beatrice C. Seegal, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Pathology

Angus C. Sampath. D.Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

At St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Professor

George A. Hashim (in Surgery). Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

MICROBIOLOGY NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY 75

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Azra Shahidi. M.S., Wisconsin, 1963; Ph.D., Missouri, 1967

Neurological Surgery

Byron Stookey Professor and Chairman

Bennett M. Stein. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., McGill, 1955

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

James W. Correll. B.A., Brown, 1941; M.D., Cornell, 1944 Edgar M. Housepian. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953

Associate Professor

Kalmon Post. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York University, 1967 Associate Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Peter W. Carmel. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960 James G. McMurtry III. B.A., Rice, 1953; M.D., Baylor, 1957 W. Jost Michelsen. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Assistant Professors

Joao Lubo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon, 1968

Donald Oliver Quest. B.S., Illinois, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Ronald Brisman. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., 1965

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY Wilson Raddinq Ph D NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY

Harvey R. Nova, M.D. George L. Becker, Jr.,

M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert W. Mackie. M.D., Long Island Medical College, 1944

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY

Bruce Stephen Harris, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

James E. O. Hughes. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962 Robert W. Schick (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

76 NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY NEUROLOGY

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY George V. DiGiacinto, M.D.

Neurology

Henry and Lucy Moses Professor and Chairman

Lewis P. Rowland. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1948

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Darryl C. DeVivo (Sidney Carter Professor) (also Pediatrics). B.A., Amherst, 1959;

M.D., Virginia, 1964 Salvatore DiMauro. M.D., Padova (Italy), 1963 Stanley Fahn (H. Houston Merritt Professor). A.B., California (Berkeley), 1955; M.D.,

California (San Francisco), 1 958 Arthur Karlin (also Biochemistry). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Robert E. Lovelace. M.B.,B.S., London, 1953; M.D., 1957 James H. Schwartz (also Physiology). B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York

University, 1959; Ph.D. Rockefeller, 1964 Earl A. Zimmerman. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1963

Professor of Microbiology and of Human Genetics and Development

Elvin A. Kabat. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937

Professor of Physiology

John P. Reuben. B.A., Grinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D., Florida, 1959 Professors of Clinical Neurology

Abe Chutorian (also Pediatrics). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; M.A., 1950; B.S., 1952; M.D.,

1957 Arnold Gold (also Pediatrics). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D.,

Lausanne, 1950 Eli S. Goldensohn (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., George Washington, 1937; M.D.,

1940 James P. Hammill. B.S., LaSalle, 1947; M.D. Pennsylvania, 1948 Niels L. Low (also Pediatrics). M.D., South Carolina, 1940 Daniel Sciarra. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943

Associate Professors

Lucien J. Cote (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954 Claude P.J. Ghez (also Physiology). B.Sc, Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 William Allen Hauser (in the Sergievsky Center). A.B., Western Reserve, 1958; M.D.,

St. Louis, 1962 Timothy A. Pedley. B.A., Pomona, 1965; M.D., Yale, 1969 Audrey S. Penn. B.A., Swarthmore, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology

Naunihal Sachdev Singh. M.B., B.S., Vikram (India), 1959; M.D., All India Institute (New Delhi), 1962

NEUROLOGY 77

Associate Professor of Clinical Neuropharmacology

Charles E. Pippenger. B.A., Ball State, 1961; M.A., 1962; Ph.D., Purdue, 1971

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert E. Barrett. B.S., William and Mary, 1953; M.D., Medical College of Virginia,

1957 Robert A. deNapoIi. M.D., Harvard, 1954

Linda D. Lewis. B.S., Bethany, 1961; M.D., West Virginia, 1965 Joseph L. O'Brien. A.B., Princeton, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1950 Margaret Seiden. B.S., M.B., M.D., London, 1949

Senior Research Associate

George M. Katz. B.E.E., College of the City of New York, 1942

Assistant Professors

Gary Abrams. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1970; M.D., Pittsburgh,

1974 Hai Won Chang. Ph.D., Columbia, 1961 Arnold Eggers. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971 Daniel J. Goldberg (also Pharmacology). Ph.D., Yale, 1974 William G. Johnson. B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Columbia, 1967 Masataki Kawai. Ph.D., Princeton, 1971

James R. Miller. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Kuldup K. Sachdev. M.B.,B.S., Agre (India), 1957; M.D., Punjab, 1962 Stephen Shafer (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966;

M.D., Columbia, 1970 Stuart R. Snider. B.A., Northwestern, 1961; M.D., 1966 Martha M. Sorenson. B.A., Oberlin, 1963; M.S., Washington (Seattle), 1967; Ph.D.,

1969 C. Dominique Toran-Allerand (in International Institute for the Study of Human

Reproduction). B.A., Smith, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959 Joseph H. Willner. B.A., Hamilton College, 1966; M.D., New York, 1970 Donald Wood. B.S., Washington (Seattle), 1967; Ph.D., Washington State, 1973

Assistant Professors of Anatomy

Halina Den. B.S., Frankfurt (Germany), 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954;

Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Abraham B. Eastwood. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1965; M.S., Lehigh, 1967; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Terrene L. Rosenberry. B.A., Oberlin 1965; Ph.D., Oregon, 1969

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Frank K. Boschenstein. B.A., Toronto, 1950; M.D., 1954

Theodore A. List. B.A., Kalamazoo, 1963; M.D., Michigan, 1967

Richard Mayeux. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968; M.D., 1972

Robert C. Michener. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1968; M.D., 1972

Marcelo Olarte. B.S., Marist Brothers, 1962; M.D., Cuyo, 1970

Morton Orentlicher. M.S., New York University, 1960; Ph.D., California (Berkeley),

1966 Richard S. Schoenfeldt. B.A., Claremont, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Sidney Starkman. B.A., Brooklyn, 1966; M.D., Georgetown, 1970

78 NEUROLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professors

David J. Adams. B.S., Rochester, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Sarala A. Devi. M.B., Ghandi Medical (India), 1962

Robert A. Esser. B.S., Loyola, 1941; M.D., Northwestern, 1945

Michael Fetell. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Eugenia T. Gamboa. B.A., Philippines, 1961; M.D., 1966

Stanley W. Holstein. B.S., George Washington, 1963; M.D., Georgetown, 1967

Charles R. Plank. B.A., Oklahoma, 1961; M.D., 1965

Jerome S. Rcsnick. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1955; M.D., 1959

Hyman G. Weitzen. B.A., New York University, 1934; M.D., 1938

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Sidney M. Cohen, M.D. James F. Culleton, M.D. Stanley Lesse, M.D. Richard S. Rhee, M.D. Bruce Roseman, M.D. Robert Wolff, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Ernest Amatniek, Ph.D. Vinayak Damle, Ph.D. William D. Niemi, Ph.D. Gajanan Nilaver, M.B.,

B.S. Paul Oratofsky, B.A. A.L.N. Prasad, Ph.D. Michael Schonberg,

Ph.D. Sidney Steinberg, B.A. Donald Wood, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Murray Engel, M.D. Damon M. Fellman, M.D. Michael L. Gruber, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Stanley L. Malkin, M.D. Alan F. Pertchik, M.D. Stanley R. Resor, Jr.,

M.D. Fereydoon Roohi, M.D. Gerald J. Smallberg, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Jean E. Collard, M.A.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Stephen C. Klass, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES H. Ryan Wagner, Ph.D. Leonard Zablow, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Philip Barnett, Ph.D. Ernest Bock, M.A. Marian Bruen, M.D. Robert D. Hawkins, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued)

Ruth Koehle Esther Helga Kutt, M.D. Peter Lau, M.A. Beverly Weiss Lubit,

Ph.D. John Paige, Ph.D. Alfred M. Salazar, Jr.,

Ph.D. Eli Shapiro, M.Phil. Haruhide Yumiya, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Sara Ginsburg, Ph.D. Harry Grundfest, Ph.D. Richard L. Masland, M.D. Carmine T. Vicale, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER IN BIOCHEMISTRY

David Nachmansohn, M.D.

LECTURER

Jeffrey Joel Rosen, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor

William Amols. B.A., New York University, 1938; M.D., 1942

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lewis L. Hamilton. B.S., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology

John CM. Brust, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

NEUROLOGY OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 79

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Alfred C . Bannerman . B. Sc. , Edinburgh, 1 963; M.B.,Ch.B., 1 966 Edward B. Healton. B.S., Oregon, 1964; M.D., Creighton, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professor

Bertel Bruun. M.D., Copenhagen, 1964

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Rafael Borras, M.D. William P. Duggan, M.D. Renee Malouf, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professor

Carl W. Braun. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

Assistant Clinical Professors

Sidney E. Bender. M.D., Toronto, 1962

Neil Lombardi (also Pediatrics). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Ann Geller, M.D.

Donald G. Rawlinson, M.D.

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Willard C. Rappleye Professor and Chairman

Raymond L. Vande Wiele (Director, International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). M.D., Louvain, 1947

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland), 1941; M.D.,

Geneva, 1957 Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (also Human Genetics). B.A., Boston,

1949; M.D., Tufts, 1955 L. Stanley James (also Pediatrics). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948 Orlando J. Miller (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D.,

1950 Allan G. Rosenfield (also Public Health) (Director Center for Population and Family

Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Professor of Biochemistry

Seymour Lieberman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois, 1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941

80 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Professor of Reproductive Biochemistry

Ines Mandl. Ph.D., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1949

Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Henry Clay Frick II. M.D., Columbia, 1944

W. Duane Todd. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Associate Professors

Bruce A. Barron. B.A., Allegheny, 1955; Ph.D., Yale, 1965; M.D., New York

University, 1971 Raphael Jewelewicz. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1960 Roy H. Petrie. B.S., Western, 1961; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1965

Associate Professor of Physiology

Michel Ferin. M.D., Louvain, 1964

Associate Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Edward T. Bowe. B.S., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Harold E. Fox. M.Sc, Rochester and Oxford, 1972

Wylie C. Hembree III (also Medicine). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D., Washington (St.

Louis), 1964 Gilbert J. Vosburgh. B.A., Princeton, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942 Susan W. Williamson. B.A., Vassar, 1939; M.D., Cornell, 1943

Associate Clinical Professors

Vincent J. Freda. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York University, 1952 David B. Moore. B.S., Hamilton, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944 Raymond U. McCaffrey. B.A., Fordham, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958

Senior Research Associate

Inge Dyrenfurth. B.S., Wilhelm, 1942; M.Sc, Strasbourg, 1944; B.Sc, Heidelberg, 1947

Assistant Professors

Laxmi Baxi. M.D., Seth C.S. Medical College (Bombay), 1962 Ming-Neng Yeh. M.D., National Taiwan, 1964 Edgardo Luis Yordam, Jr. M.D., Maryland, 1972

Assistant Professor of Anatomy

Daniel M. Linkie. Ph.D., Michigan, 1971

Assistant Professor of Endocrine Biochemistry

Richard B. Hochberg. Ph.D., Hahnemann, 1967

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Nabil Wafik Husami. B.S., M.D., American (Beirut), 1972

Richard U. Levine. B.S., Tufts, 1962; M.D., Cornell, 1966

Kevin D. Reilly. B.S., Fairfield (Connecticut), 1965; M.D., Michigan, 1965

Harold Speert. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1935; M.D., 1939

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 81

Assistant Clinical Professors

Landis K. Crockett. B.S., Michigan State, 1966; M.D., Michigan, 1970; M.P.H.,

1975 Dean J. Grandin. Wolfgang Tretter.

B.A., Columbia, 1936; M.D., 1940 M.D., Heidelberg, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Charles N. Bowers, Jr.,

M.D. Phyllis C. Leppert, M.S. Lawrence J. Severino,

M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Lajos Bandy, M.S. Hosea Fu-Shih Huang John Milton Hutson, M.D. Norma J. Greenfield Stephen Keller, Ph.D. Henry R. Rey, M.S.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Sylvia P. Rubin, M.Sc. Moshe Israel Schwartz

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Norman R. Bloch, M.D. Feliciana Chuy, M.D. Steven G. Kaali, M.D. Andrew L. Loucopoulos,

M.D. Henry A. Sellner, M.D. Leonardo J. Yunis, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Margarita H. Hawkins, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Neil G. Anderson, Ph.D. Emily Glazer, M.S. Veeramac Prasad, Ph.D. Sylvia Rubin, M.Sc. Barbara Santee, M.Phil.

LECTURERS

Richard A. Bronson, M.D. Jerome A. Dolan, M.D. Arnold N. Fenton, M.D. John L. Lewis, Jr., M.D. Paul S. Metzger, M.D. Kevin B. Reilly, M.D. David L. Rosenfeld, M.D. Sidney J. Siegel, M.D. Anna L. Southam, M.D. Christopher Tietze, M.D.

At Mary Imogens Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Douglas H. Barns. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Balazs Selendy, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Mark E. Heller, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Solan Chao. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Hiroko T. Felt on. M.D., Kansai (Japan), 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Stephen L. Matseoane. B.S., Fort Hare (South Africa), 1954; M.D., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1959

Assistant Professors

Samuel L. Bruce. B.A., Bridgeport, 1965; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1971 Keith F. Rawlinson. B.S., M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1966

82 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Sunthorn Bunyaviroch. B.S., Chulalongkorn (Thailand); M.D., Mahidol (Thailand)

Young Sook Cho. M.B., Yonsei, 1955; M.D., 1959

Nomenida A. Lazaro. B.S., Santa Tomas (Philippines), 1960; M.D., 1965

Meredith F. Sirmans. B.S., Lincoln, 1961; M.D., Meharry, 1965

Esther S. Suarez. A.A., Santa Tomas (Philippines), 1955; M.D., 1960

Alfred J. Williams. B.A., Howard, 1960; M.D., Meharry, 1964

Assistant Clinical Professor

Pisan Unchalipongse. M.D., Chiengma Medical School (Thailand), 1965

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued) ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Millicent Comrie M D OBSTETRICS AND

Jack E. Maidman, M.D. Hasi Das, M.D. ' GYNECOLOGY

I T-> I i \t T^ Angela Portale, M.S.

Jean D. Joseph, M.D. ^ '

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL a K 1 fK Mt 1 M R R C

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Ashalatha Mltal, M.tS.,h$.b.

Sitaram Vithal Chitnis, Rajasingham

j^ j-j Rahulatharan, M.D.

Johnny L. Williams, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor

Robert S. Neuwirth (F. Huntington and Dorothy Babcock Professor). B.S., Yale, 1955; M.D., 1958

Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Thomas F. Dillon. M.D., Georgetown, 1947

Harold M. M. Tovell. B.A., Toronto, 1951; M.D., 1955

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Abraham Risk. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1957; M.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1969

Associate Clinical Professors

Hussein K. Amin. M.B., Ch.B., Alexandria (Egypt), 1955 John F. Dwyer. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960

Assistant Professor

Michelle P. Warren (also Medicine). B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Ernst G. Bartsich. M.D., Frankfort, 1962

Terusada Horiguchi. M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1961

Hamid Mootabar. M.D., Pahlavi (Iran), 1966; M.P.H., Columbia, 1974

Haldar K. Shamsi. M.B., B.S., King Edward Medical College (Pakistan), 1965

Ivan K. Strausz. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1958

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY OPHTHALMOLOGY 83

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alexander Coman. M.D., Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1948

David B. Crawford. B.S., North Carolina, 1943; M.D., New York University, 1946

Emmanuel L. Greenberg. M.D., Downstate Medical Center (Brooklyn), 1941

Ivan J. Jacobson. B.A., Belgarde (Yugoslavia), 1948; M.D., 1955

Gyula Nemes. B.A., Gymn. Szekesfehervar, 1946; M.D., Budapest, 1954

Ian G. Van Praagh. M.D., Toronto, 1955

Marcia L. Storch. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1955; M.D., Woman's Medical College of

Pennsylvania, 1973 Riley W. Waller. B.S., LeMoyne, 1943; M.D., Howard, 1947

Senior Research Associates

Muriel Feigelson. Ph.D., New York University, 1961

Bernardo Handszer. M.D., National University of Colombia, 1959

Daniel A. Tsin. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1965

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Farshad Agahi, M.D. Nargess A. Ahgharian Terry L. Andrews, M.D. Edison K. Asenha, M.D. Feliope Bozzo, M.D. Kok Chung Chang, M.D. Gerard de Catalogne,

M.D. Frederick Clare, M.D. Satwant Kaur Dhamoon,

M.R.C.O.G. Bialines Espinosa, M.D. Rauf G. Faroqui, M.B.,

B.S. Paul Filpescu David Elliott Jacobowitz John Jakus, M.D. Jay Joel Kelinson, M.D. Nicholas Klein, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Gary M. Levine, M.D. Leon Lewenstein, M.D. Ezatolah Mohajer-Shojai,

M.D. Adamandia

Panayotopoulos, M.D. Benu Pascariu, M.D. Humberto Portillo, M.D. Meera Prabat, M.B.,

B.S. George S. Radney, M.D. Raphael Reiss, M.D. Ronald J. Reiss, M.D. Irving Ward Robinson,

M.D. Arnold Roufa, M.D. Peter S. Sailon, M.D. Bruce M. Schiffman, M.D. Istvan Paul Tornai, M.D. Filippo Vita, M.D. Olwen Joy Wellington,

M.B., B.S.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Mary E. Wilson, M.D. James T. Yang, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Malca Sane, M.D.

LECTURERS

Naif K. Basile, M.D.

Charles H. Debrovner,

M.D. Michael Harel, M.D. Roger Hassid, M.D. Andre Nehorayoff, M.D. Robert M. Podell Richard A. Ruskin, M.D. Fouad Surur, M.B., B.Ch.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Malathy Singh

Ophthalmology

Edward S. Harkness Professor and Chairman

Charles J. Campbell. M.D., George Washington, 1948; B.S., Muskingum, 1949; M.S., Rochester, 1951; Med.Sc.D., Columbia, 1957

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Endre A. Balazs (Malcolm P. Aldrich Professor). M.D., Budapest, 1942

84 OPHTHALMOLOGY

Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

Abraham Spector. Ph.D., New York University, 1957

Professor of Microbiology

Wladyslaw Manski. M.Phil., Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw (Poland), 1951

Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Philip Knapp. B.A., Harvard, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941

Clinical Professors

Robert M. Day. B.A., Wesley an, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1944 Ira S. Jones. B.A., Columbia, 1940; M.D., 1943

Associate Professor

Peter Gouras. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1951; M.D., 1955

Associate Professor of Physiology

Jorge Fischbarg. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago, 1971

Associate Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Andrew de Roetth, Jr. B.S., Northwestern, 1943; M.D., 1946 Anthony Donn. B.S., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952 R. Linsy Farris. M.D., Duke, 1961

Max Forbes. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Chicago, 1957 Francis A. L'Esperance, Jr. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Harold F. Spalter. B.A., Brown, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Stephen Trokel. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1959; Med. Sci.D., Columbia, 1965

Associate Professor of Ocular Physiology

Laszlo Z. Bito. B.A., Bard, 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1963

Associate Clinical Professors

William C. Cooper. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 John W. Espy. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 George M. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Albany, 1959

Assistant Professor of Biophysical Ophthalmology

Charles J. Koester. B.S., Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1950; Ph.D., Rochester, 1955

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

James P. Dillon. B.S., Canisious College, 1964; M.S., Columbia, 1973; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Pharmacology

Prasad S. Kulkarni. B.S., Shivaji (India), 1965; M.S., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971; Ph.D., 1974

OPHTHALMOLOGY 85

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S., Miami, 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Myles M. Behrens. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Richard W. Darrell. B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959; Med. Sc.D., Columbia, 1965 Arnold W. Forrest. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., New York University/, 1942 Frank B. Hoefle. B.A., Dartmouth, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1961 Sally Moore (Orthoptics). B.S., Delaware, 1952 Balachandran D. Srinivasan. Ph.D., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1967 Emil Wirostko. B.S., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960; Med. Sc.D., Columbia, 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Frederic H. Deutsch. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., New York Medical College, 1951

Hugh M. Moss. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1954

Ellen F. Regan. B.A., Wellesley, 1940; M.D., Yale, 1943

Hampson Albert Sisler. B.S., New York University, 1954; M.D., 1957

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

William A. James, Jr.,

M.D. Rainer N. Mittl, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

E. Anita Anderson Ethel I. Anderson, Ph.D. Gerard Armand, Ph.D. Mary T. Flood, B.S. William H. Garner', Ph.D. Lu-Ku-Li, Ph.D. Jong J. Lim, Ph.D. Kasimierz Malinowski, Ph.D. Victoria Ozanics, M.S. Debutta Roy, Ph.D. Robert Siminoff, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Howard M. Eggers, M.D. Albert J. Hofeldt, M.D. Lawrence G. Pape, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Richard D. Banyard, M.D. Donald H. Green, M.D. Martin L. Leib, M.D. Richard G. Lennon, M.D. Suzanne Li, M.D. Stanley Masters Louis D. Pizzarello, M.D. Lance D. Redler, M.D. Jaime Santamaria III, M.D. Jesse L. Sigelman, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Suraj Prakash Bhat, Ph.D. Margaret H. Garner Cecily Medvedovsky, M.D. Anne X. Poison, Ph.D. Heinz Rosskothen Charles Weiss, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Roger A. Baroody, B.A. Sarah Oliver Briller Carol J. De Rousseau,

Ph.D. Janet L. Denlinger, M.D. Helena M. Eakins,

D.Pharm. Maria O. Longas, B.A. Hermann D. Schubert,

M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Frank D. Carroll, M.D. George R. Merriam, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Zacharias Dische, M.D. Karl Meyer, M.D.

LECTURERS

Frank De Benedetto

Julius A. Vida, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Thomas A. Farrell. B.A., Hamilton, 1957; M.D., McGill; 1961 ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY Charles B. Deichman, M.D.

86 OPHTHALMOLOGY ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

At Harlem Hospital

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY Herman C. Jordon, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Rajendra K. Bansal, M.B.,

B.S. Antonio M. Gonzalez,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) John p. Mitchell, M.D. Ram P. Tiwari, M.S.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY Andrew Goldstein, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

James C. Newton. B.S., Fordham, 1949; Ph.D., 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Louis V. Angioletti, Jr.,

M.D. Ulises Arango, M.D. Philip A. Bonanno, M.D. Chin Wing Chu, M.D. Robert C. DellaRocca,

M.D. John Eden, M.D.

ASSISTANTS {continued)

Bernard J. Fowler, M.D. Dennis D. Freilich, M.D. Richard S. Kochman, M.D. Charles Merker, M.D. Thomas O. Muldoon, M.D. Charlermpong Sarakhun,

M.D. Morton H. Seelenfreund,

M.D.

ASSISTANTS {continued)

Howard K. Weisberg,

M.D. Joseph Wynn Wesley,

M.D.

LECTURER

Edward L. Raab, M.D.

Orthopedic Surgery

Frank Stinchfield Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery and Chairman

Alexander Garcia. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1 943

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

C. Andrew L. Bassett. M.D., Columbia, 1948; Med.Sc.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Robert E. Carroll. B.A., Yale, 1938; M.D., 1942

Harold M. Dick. B.A., Princeton, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960 S. Ashby Grantham. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1952; M.D., 1955 Charles S. Neer II. B.A., Dartmouth, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1942 Charles T. Ryder. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1939; M.D., Harvard, 1943

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY 87

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Austin D. Johnston. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

Associate Professor of Anatomy

Stephen Bruce Doty. B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George B. Ambrose. B.A., Columbia, 1940; M.D., 1943 Nas S. Eftekhar. M.D., Teheran, 1960

Hugo A. Keim. B.S., St. Mary's (Minnesota), 1956; M.S., Northwestern, 1966; M.D., Loyola, 1960

Associate Clinical Professor

David L. Andrews, B.A., Williams, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Senior Research Associate

Arthur A. Pilla. B.S., St. Joseph's, 1958; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1958; D.Sc, Paris, 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rosamond Kane. M.D., Columbia, 1952

Robert M. Reiss. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., 1959

James N. Worcester, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Assistant Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

John R. Denton. B.S., West Point, 1960; M.D., Medical College of Alabama, 1967 Howard A. Kiernan, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966

Assistant Professor of Orthopedic Biomechanics

Robert W. Pawluck. B.S., Columbia, 1974; M.B.A., 1977

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Peter N. Carbonara, M.D. William U. Cavallaro,

M.D. Robert N. Dunn, M.D. Merle H. Katzman, M.D. Christopher B. Michelson,

M.D. Harvey Orlin, M.D. Thomas D. Rodda, M.D. Joseph E. Salvatore, M.D. E. Baldwin Self, Jr., M.D. William A. Sinton, M.D. L. Arne Skilbred, M.D. David M. Smith, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued)

Martin L. Sorger, M.D. Joel D. Weinstein, M.D. Eric K. Zeitzmann, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Harshad R. Chokshi, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Steven Berkowitz, M.D. Louis U. Bigliani, M.D. Stuart J. Fischer, M.D. Richard E. Fleming, Jr., M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Lawrence A. Lefkowitz,

M.D. Stephen J. Mcllveen,

M.D. David Price Roye, Jr. Harvey S. Sicherman,

M.D. Ronald Tietjen, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Sharon M. Mitchell, B.S. George Tzitzikalakios, M.S.

SPECIAL LECTURER Frank Stinchfield, M.D.

88 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Marvin L. Shelton. B.S., Howard, 1951; M.D., 1956

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC

SURGERY SURGERY

Aaron M. Gold, M.D. John F. Crowe, M.D. (in Surgery)

William L. King, M.D. (in Surgery) John B. Nailor, M.D. (in Surgery) Germukh S. Walha, M.D. (in Surgery)

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Alice L. Garrett. B.S., Washington State, 1944; M.D., Southern California, 1954

Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George Van B. Cochran. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1956; Med.Sc.D., 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Edward B. Leahey. B.A., Fordham, 1941; M.D., Georgetown, 1944 Raphael K. Levine. B.A., Brandeis, 1961; M.D., Jefferson, 1965

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Robert L. S. Boothe, M.D. Abraham C. Kovarsky, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Joseph W. Fielding. M.D., Toronto, 1946

Associate Clinical Professor

Robert E. Zickel. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Vincent G. Fietti, Jr. B.A., Boston, 1968; M.D., 1972 Frederic E. Helbig. B.A., Brown, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1969 Tarek Hisham Mardam-Bey. M.D., American (Beirut), 1972 Ronald M. Match. B.A., Hofstra, 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957 Andrew H. Patterson. M.D., Columbia, 1958

George L. Unis. B.A., New York University, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1975

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC

SURGERY SURGERY

William G. Hamilton, M.D. Richard J. Cea, M.D.

James C. Parkes II, M.D. John F. Crowe, M.D.

Joel E. Rothermel, M.D. Sanford A. Ratzan, M.D.

Luther F. Warren, M.D.

OTOLARYNGOLOGY 89

Otolaryngology

Professor and Chairman

Maxwell Abramson. B.A., Wesleyan, 1957; M.D., Union (Albany), 1961

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Juergen Tonndorf. M.D., Kiel (Germany), 1938; Ph.D., Heidelberg, 1945

Professors of Clinical Otolaryngology

Robert M. Hui. B.A., Southern California, 1943; M.D., 1946

Robin M. Rankow. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1935; D.D.S., Columbia, 1940; M.D., Rochester, 1950

Professor of Clinical Audiology and Speech Pathology

Thomas H. Fay. B.A., Florida, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Illinois, 1958

Associate Professor of Auditory Biophysics

Shyam M. Khanna. B.Sc, Lucknow (India), 1951; D.R.E., St. Xavier College (Bom- bay), 1954; Ph.D., City College, 1970

Associate Clinical Professors

Lawrence Savetsky. B.A., New York University, 1951; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1955 Malcolm H. Schvey. B.A., Lehigh, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., Amsterdam,

1956

Assistant Professors

Andrew Blitzer (also Oral Surgery). B.A., Adelphi, 1966; D.D.S., Columbia, 1970;

M.D., Mt. Sinai School of Medicine (New York), 1973 Anthony Frederick Jahn. B.Sc, Toronto, 1969; M.Sc, 1970; M.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Biochemical Otolaryngology

Cheng Chun Huang. B.S., Taiwan, 1963; M.S., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., Iowa, 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology

Frank V. Mignogna. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Raymond B. Strauss. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1950; Ph.D., Florida, 1956; M.D.,

Western Reserve, 1 968 John D. Piro (Prosthetic). B.A., Fordham, 1943; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946

90 OTOLARYNGOLOGY PATHOLOGY

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued) STAFF ASSOCIATE

OTOLARYNGOLOGY William J. Richtsmeier, Michel Berreby, M.D.

Milton Ivker, M.D. M.D.

Theodore Kramer, M.D. Peter D. Westerhoff, M.D.

Arthur B. Lacher, M.D. Melvin Wiederkehr, M.D.

Richard S. Mega, M.D. Carl Wiesenthal, M.D.

Nicholas D. Pontilena, Howard D. Zipper, M.D. M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Errol A. Thompson. M.B., University College (Dublin), 1936

Assistant Professor

Lee David Eisenberg (in Surgery). B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Clinical Professor

Ransford C. Newman. M.B.,B.S., London, 1960; F.R.C.S., Edinburgh, 1968

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professor

John S. Lewis. M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1943

Stanley Whitfield. Certificate, Harris Academy, Dundee, 1940; M.B., Ch.B., St. Andrew's University Medical School, 1946

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY Awny Aziz Abdou, M.B., Ch.B. Arshad H. Amjad, M.D. Maria Aramburu, M.D. Neville W. Carmical, M.D. James F. Grille, M.D. Tay Bong Lee, M.D. Mauriciu Rodescu, M.D.

Pathology

Francis Delafield Professor and Chairman

Donald W. King. M.D., Syracuse, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Richard Axel (also Biochemistry). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 William A. Blanc. B.A., Geneva, 1940; M.D., 1947; Ph.D., 1952

PATHOLOGY 91

Paul Ellner (also Microbiology). M.S., Southern California, 1952; Ph.D., Maryland,

1956 Gabriel C. Godman (also Microbiology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D.,

1944 Conrad L. Pirani. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Ralph M. Richart. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Virginia Tennyson (also Anatomy). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor,

1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Professor of Microbiology

Henry J. Vogel. B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., 1949

Professor of Comparative Pathology

Ross M. Grey. D. V.M., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1945

Professors of Neuropathology

Phillip E. Duffy. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1947

Leon Roizin (in Psychiatry). B.A., State Lyceum {Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1936

Professor of Surgical Pathology

Luciano Ozzello. M.D., Turin (Italy), 1951

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Austin D. Johnston (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

Adjunct Professors

Robert V. Hutter. B.A., State University of New York (Syracuse), 1950; M.D., 1954;

M.A., Yale, 1968 Harry L. loachim. M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Sidney Pestka. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961

Clinical Professors

Victor Herbert. B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952 Pablo Rubinstein. M.D., Chile, 1962 Sheldon C. Sommers. M.D., Harvard, 1941

Clinical Professor of Oral Pathology

Melvin N. Blake. D.D.S., New York University, 1955

Associate Professors

Cecilia M. Fenoglio. B.S., St. Elizabeth, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 John J. Fenoglio, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 John P. Nicholson (also Pediatrics). B.S., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1958

92 PATHOLOGY

Associate Professor of Dentistry

David J. Zegarelli. B.A., Columbia, 1965; D.D.S., 1969

Associate Professors of Neuropathology

Lester M. Geller. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.A., Michigan State, 1948; Ph.D., New York

University, 1953 Mavis Kaufman (in Psychiatry). M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Associate Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Richard F. Defendini. B.A., Michigan, 1948; M.A., 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pathology

Thomas A. Blumenfeld. A. A., North Carolina, 1960; M.D., Tennessee, 1964 Carmia Borek (in Radiology). B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weitzmann Institute (Israel), 1967 Arline D. Deitch (in Anatomy). B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D.,

1954 Reba A. Goodman. B.A., Indiana, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1952; Ph.D., 1955 Mary E. King. B.A., Smith, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951 Nicole Suciu-Foca (in Surgery). B.S., Bucharest (Rumania), 1959; M.S., 1960; Ph.D.,

1965 Myron Tannenbaum (in Urology). B.S., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955;

Ph.D., 1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961 Ruth H. Vogel. Ph.D., New York University, 1958

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatric Pathology

H. Joachim Wigger. M.D., Hamburg, 1954

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Karl Perzin. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958

Marianne Wolff. B.A., Hunter, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ernest Baden. M.A., Sorbonne, 1946; D.D.S., New York University, 1950; M.D.,

Geneva, 1962 Jan Vincents Johannesen. M.D., Bergen (Norway), 1966 M. Richard Pachter. M.D., Zurich, 1956 William Pollack. M.S., Rutgers, 1950; Ph.D., 1964 Robert R. Rickert. B.A., Michigan, 1958; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1962 Harry H. Stumpf. B.A., New York University, 1947; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1951 John A. Terzakis. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 Kaity Yannopoulos. M.D., Greece, 1954 Frederick T. Zugibe. B.S., St. Francis, 1951; M.S., Chicago, 1959; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Irwin A. Almenoff. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1952 Daniel W. Benninghoff. B.A., Yale, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Donald E. Brown. M.D., Harvard, 1943

PATHOLOGY 93

John M. Budinger. B.S., Northwestern, 1950; M.D., 1954

Robert L. Hirsch. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., 1951

David N. Silvers (also Dermatology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968

Stanley Simbonis. B.S., Yale, 1953; M.D., 1957

Harold J. Sobel. B.A., Brooklyn, 1950; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1954

Richard L. Swarm. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1949; M.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

Jerome Owen Cantor. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1975

Seth Goldberg. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1966; B.A., California,

1964; M.D., State University of New York [Downstate), 1970 Stephen Keller. B.S., Pace, 1971; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Daniel M. Knowles. B.A., Bridgeport, 1969; M.D., Chicago, 1973 Jay Lefkowitch. B.A., Clark, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976 Ricardo Mesa-Tejada. B.S., Manhattan, 1964; M.D., Madrid, 1970 Armand Miranda. B.S., Columbia, 1969; Ph.D., 1973

Assistant Professor of Neuropathology

Arthur P. Hays. B.A., Dartmouth, 1962; B. Med. Sci., 1963; M.D., Colorado, 1966

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Herbert Barden. B.S., Brooklyn, 1952; M.S., New York University, 1960; Ph.D., 1964

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pathology

E. Glenn Armstrong. B.S., Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1966; M.S., 1969; Ph.D.,

Maryland, 1975 Daniel J. Fink. B.S., Cornell, 1968; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1970; M.D., Columbia, 1975; M.Phil., 1980 Mary M. Lee. B.S., Michigan, 1966; Ph.D., 1972 Gerda Nette. B.S., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., 1973 Michael Pesce. B.S., St. Johns, 1967; Ph.D., 1971 Maria Mahdalyna Shevchuk. B.A, Fordham, 1970; M.D., Upstate Medical Center

(Syracuse), 1974 Philip Tomashefsy (in Urology). Ph.D., New York University, 1969 Nicholas J. Willson. B.S., Saint Peter's, 1959; M.D., Seton Hall, 1963

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Solange G. Abunassar. M.D., American (Beirut), 1968

Majid Ali. M.B., B.S., Punjab (India), 1963

Paul Bachner. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Harry Woodson Carter. M.D., Harvard, 1957

Larry E. Douglass. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1959; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1960

Howard B. Goldstein. B.A., Colgate, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959

Arthur I. Hurvitz. D. V.M., Michigan State, 1964; Ph.D., California (Davis), 1967

Catherine Kambolis. M.D., Athens, 1955

Paul A. Krieger. B.S., City College, 1967; M.D., New York Medical College, 1971

Richard A. McReynolds. M.S., Virginia, 1968; M.D., 1971

Basil Moumgis. M.D., Pittsburgh, 1949

Frederick Muschenheim. B.A., Howard, 1953; M.D.C.M., McGill, 1963

Robert D. Newman. B.S., California (Los Angeles), 1958; M.D., 1962

94 PATHOLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professors

Giles G. Allard. B.A., Montreal, 1944; M.D., Laval, 1950

Lucretia Allen. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1952 Stefan E. Epstein. B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., State University of New York

(Buffalo), 1960 Hiroshi Nakazawa. M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1958

Henry G. Schriever. B.A., Vermont, 1956; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960 Ralph W. Snyder. B.S.. McGill, 1951; M.D., 1953

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

May Parisien, M.D. Heidrun Zweitnig- Rotterdam, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Reba Goodman, Ph.D. Moshe Rosen, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

Marguerite M. Duby, M.D. Milagros Ona-Sarino, M.D. Elena Zegarelli-Schmidt,

Ph.D. Monica C. Yang, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Margaret M. Grimes, M.D. Charles Chostner Marboe, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE Janet Tannenbaum

SPECIAL LECTURERS Lester R. Cahn, D.D.S. David Cowen, M.D. C. Zent Garber, M.D. Raffaele Lattes, M.D. Meyer M. Melicow, M.D. Abner Wolf, M.D.

LECTURERS

Michael Baden, M.D. Paul A. Brown, M.D. Hyman Donnenfeld, M.D. Frederick A. Jacobiec,

M.D. Janis F. Klavins, M.D. David Spain, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Charles A. Ashley. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D., 1947; M.S., Illinois, 1951 Assistant Clinical Professor

Harlan D. Alpern. B.S., Michigan, 1967; M.D., Chicago, 1971

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

William B. Giuney, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor

Jack W. C. Hagstrom. B.A., Amherst, 1955; M.D., Cornell, 1959

Associate Clinical Professors

Prem Chauhan. F. Sc. Med., Punjab (India), 1942; M.D., B.S., 1948 Carlos Navarro. B.S., National University (Mexico), 1947; M.D., 1955 Angus C. Sampath (in Microbiology). D. Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

Assistant Professor of Medicine and Pathology

Clayton L. Natta. B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1957; M.D., Toronto, 1961

PATHOLOGY 95

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Helen M. S. Richards. M.B., B.S., Colombo (Sri Lanka), 1969

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Luritz C. Creque, M.D. Juan B. Gabriel Louys Thomas, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professor

Bernard M. Wagner. M.D., Hahnemann, 1949

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Robert Galen. B.A., Boston, 1966; M.D., 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors

Anthony Marchand. B.A., Connecticut, 1966; M.D., Duke, 1970

Joel A. Roth. B.A., Brooklyn, 1964; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1968

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Frederick van Lente, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor

S. Raymond Gambino. B.S., Antioch, 1948; M.D., Rochester, 1952 Professor of Clinical Pathology

Arthur W. Branwood. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1942; M.D., 1948 Professor of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Robert R. Pascal. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., 1962

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Stephen F. Ryan. M.D., Colorado, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

John Y. Kiyasu. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1951; Ph.D., 1955 Artemis D. Nash. B.A., Smith, 1949; M.D., Columbia 1953

Louise L. Phillips. B.S., William and Mary, 1934; M.D., Columbia, 1940; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Clinical Professors

Lazarevic Bozidar. M.D., Belgrade, 1956

John J. Di Re. B.S., McGill, 1953; M.D., George Washington, 1957

Harold P. Gaetz. B.S., McGill, 1953; M.D., 1958

Martin S. Krumerman. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., 1965

96 PATHOLOGY PEDIATRICS

Assistant Professor

Deng Fong Liau. M.Sc, McGill, 1968; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pathology

Kenneth F. Button. B.A., Indiana, 1966; M.D., 1970 Derek Englander. M.D., Royal College (London), 1963

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

Petra Elena P. Banogon,

M.D. Corazon S. Sian, M.D. Rose-Sunitha Thayaparan,

M.D. Mah Manzar Yamohommady,

M.D.

Pediatrics

Reuben S. Carpentier Professor and Chairman

Michael Katz (also Public Health). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Arthur D. Bloom (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Harvard, 1956;

M.D., New York University, 1960 Ralph Dell. B.A., Pomona, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961 Darryl C. De Vivo (also Neurology). B.A., Amherst, 1959; M.D., Virginia, 1964 Welton M. Gersony. B.A., Syracuse, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Upstate), 1958 L. Stanley James (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Otago (New Zealand),

1948 Robert B. Mellins. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1952 Sergio Piomelli. B.A., Liceo Sannazzaro (Naples), 1948; M.D., Naples, 1954 Michael Rosen. B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1964 Myron Winick (Williams Professor and Director of Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.S., Illinois, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1956 Robert W. Winters. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., Yale, 1952

Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Abe Chutorian (also Neurology). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; B.S., 1952; M.D., 1957 Arnold R. Gold (also Neurology). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D.,

Lausanne, 1950 Sylvia P. Griffiths. B.A., Hunter, 1944; M.D., Yale, 1948 Jerry C. Jacobs. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1956 Niels L. Low (also Neurology). M.D., South Carolina, 1940

PEDIATRICS 97

David Shaffer (also Psychiatry). M.D., London, 1961

Joe D. Wray (in Public Health). B.A., Stanford, 1947; M.D., 1952

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

H. Donald Dunton. M.D., Rochester, 1945

Clinical Professor of Pediatric Psychology

Michael Lewis. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1958; Ph.D., 1962

Associate Professors

Jo Anne Brasel (in Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Colorado, 1956; M.D., 1959 Nicholas Cunningham (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns

Hopkins, 1955 Joseph Graziano (also Pharmacology). B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971 William C. Heird. B.S., Maryville, 1958; M.S., Vanderbilt, 1963; M.D., 1964 Allen I. Hyman (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical

College, 1959 Ehud Krongrad. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1965 Gilbert W. Mellin. B.S., Bethany, 1945; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949 Akira Morishima. M.D., Keio (Japan), 1954; Ph.D., 1961 John F. Nicholson (also Pathology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1958 Pedro Rosso (in Obstetrics & Gynecology and Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D.,

Chile, 1966 David Rush (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Katherine Sprunt. B.A., Wellesley, 1942; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1945

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Russell S. Asnes. B.A., Boston, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1963

Jennifer J. Bell. B.A., Swarthmore, 1953; M.D., New York, 1961

William J. Davis. B.A., Wilkes, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

John M. Driscoll. B.A., Hamilton, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1962

Susan G. Gordon. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1946; M.D., Howard, 1950

Anthony Mansell. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., Ohio State, 1965

Martin Nash. B.A., Duke, 1960; M.D., 1964

Jane Pitt. B.A., Radcliffe, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964

Anneliese L. Sitarz. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Carl N. Steeg. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1962

Dorothy Warburton (in Human Genetics and Development). Ph.D., McGill, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

Fred Agre. B.A., Lafayette, 1957; M.D., Duke, 1961

Robert Appleby. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

William A. Bauman. B.S., Harvard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Constance J. Hayes. B.S., St. Rose, 1959; M.D., Loyola, 1965

John J. Kangos. B.S., Rutgers, 1945; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1948

Jack ShiUer. B.A., North Carolina, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Joseph A. Silverman. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Stephen Wang (at Morristown Memorial Hospital). B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D.,

1964 Leo F. J. Wilking. B.S., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

98 PEDIATRICS

Assistant Professors

Kwame Anyane-Yeboa. M.D., Ghana, 1972

Stephen J. Atwood. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Candace Jean Erickson. B.A., George Washington, 1969; M.D., Maryland, 1973

Gabriel G. Haddad. B.S., American (Beirut), 1969; M.D., 1972

Karen Hein. B.A., Wisconsin, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1970

David S. Hodes (also Microbiology). B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Allan J. Hordof. B.A., Hobart, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966

Joseph S. Levy. M.D., Hadassah (Israel), 1971

Adrien Moessinger. M.D., Lausanne, 1971

Emi Okamoto. M.D., Columbia, 1973

Nigel Paneth (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968;

M.D., Harvard, 1972; M.P.H., Columbia, 1978 Leila M. Pang (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1970 Joan A. Regan. M.D., Missouri, 1974 Tove Rosen. B.A., Rochester, 1961; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1965 Karl F. Schulze. B.A., Carleton, 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1965 S. Alex Stalcup. B.A., Whittier College, 1967; M.D., California, 1971 Raymond I. Stark. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1970 Shobhana Vora. M.D., Bombay (India), 1973 Christine Ann Walsh. M.D., Yale, 1973 Michael A. Weiner. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1968; M.D., State University of New

York (Upstate), 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Bernard R. Feldman. B.S., William and Mary, 1955; M.D., Chicago Medical School,

1959 Charles Feldman. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1970 Burton Grebin. B.A., Adelphi, 1962; M.D., New York Medical College, 1966 Donald E. Hutchings (also Psychiatry). B.A., Lake Forest, 1959; M.A., Chicago, 1963;

Ph.D., 1965 Celia Ores. M.D., Berne (Switzerland), 1956

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rose G. Ames. B.A., Barnard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1944 Alexander Blum, Jr. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947 Frederick M. Bomback. B.A., Brandeis, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College,

1969 Matilda B. Brust. B.A., Marietta, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Roger Challop. B.S., Brooklyn, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967 Yvonne T. DriscoU. B.A., Trinity, 1958; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsyl- vania, 1962 T. Donald Eisenstein. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1952; M.D., Albany Medical College,

1956 Marguerite J. Gates. B.A., Barnard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Gustave Gavis. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Thurman B. Givan, Jr. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Stephen Glaser. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Bertram H. Grossman. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Georgetown, 1959

PEDIATRICS 99

Jeannette J. Jansky. M.S., City College, 1960; Ph.D., Columbia, 1970

Kenneth H. Katz. B.A., Lafayette, 1968; M.D.. New York Medical College, 1973

Murray D. Kuhr. B.S.. Cincinnati, 1961; M.D., Chicago. 1965

Betty C.M.L. Kuo. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964

George Lazarus. B.A.. Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971

Dean N. Martin. B.A., Hofstra. 1959; M.D.. Albany Medical College, 1963

Harriet E. McGurk. B.A., Radcliffe. 1967; M.D.. Albert Einstein, 1973

Daniel J. Melia. B.A.. Harvard. 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Harriette R. Mogul. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D.. Albert Einstein. 1965

Damyanti Moorjani (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S.. Bombay. 1953; M.D., Grant

(Bombay), 1957 Gilda Morillo-Cucci . M.D., Phillipines, 1 962; M. P. H. , Colum bia .1975 Stanley Morrison. B.A., Temple, 1963; M.D., George Washington, 1967 Michael Novogroder. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., State University of New York,

1969 Herbert Pooh. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D.. 1953 Morton H. Rachelson. B.A., Syracuse, 1946; M.D., Tulane, 1950 Margaret M. Rice. B.S., Marymount, 1943; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Roderick C. Richards. B.A.. Cornell, 1945; M.D.. 1948 Louis Rodregues. B.S.. College of the City of New York, 1955; M.D., State University

of New York (Downstate), 1959 Albert P. Rosen. B.B., North Carolina. 1939; M.D.. Long Island College of Medicine.

1943 John S. Rosmaita. B.A., St. Peter's, 1953; M.D., State University of New York, 1957 Malcolm S. Schwartz. D.D., College of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery, 1967 Edith M. J. Kuo-Ying Shen. M.D., Lud wig-Maximilian (Munich), 1960 Kung-Tso Sheng. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai). 1954 Elliot J. Siegel. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1954; M.D., 1968 Gilbert Simon. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Rochester, 1962 Lawrence Skolnick. B.A., Queens (New York), 1968; M.D., New York University,

1972; Ph.D.. North Carolina. 1980 William H. Smith. B.A., Rochester, 1941; M.D., 1944 Susan Speer. B.A., Wellesley, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972 David Stiles. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943 Martin B. Vita. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., 1954 William W. Whitten. B.A., Wesleyan, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947

Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

Edwin A. Goldstein. B.A., Brooklyn College, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Maryann J. Colenda, M.D. John L. Costa, M.D. Alan Kanter, M.D. Peter F. Migel, M.D. Robert M. Schwartz, M.D. David H. Wisotsky, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES William B. Bell, M.D. Grace Leidy, M.D. Frank T. Nakamura, B.S. Rajasekhar

Ramakrishnan, Sc.D. Gail Wasserman, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Martha L. Amarant, M.D. Gaya Aranoff, M.D. William J. Chernack, M.D. Dennis Davidson, M.D. Agnes D. Dilworth, M.S.S. Arlene Falk, M.D. Bernadette Fiscina, M.D. Stanley H. Gilbert, Jr.,

M.D. Nora Haddad-Farkouh,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Robert A. Hands, M.D. Marie B. Keith, M.D. Michael L. Lapkin, M.D. William L. Lupatkin, M.D. Sylvia Morgan, M.D. Marilyn Nosh, M.D. Mary R. Richards, M.D. Morton J. Seligman, M.D. John G. Slater, M.D. D. Loren Southern, M.D. Margaret Young. M.D.

100 PEDIATRICS

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS Alma T. Blitz, M.D. Knang-Chung Chien, M.D. Lilian Wah-Ying Chiu, M.D. Bernard Etra, M.D. Mathew Feldman, M.D. Rosalinda Rubenstein,

M.D. Susan Skalsky, M.D. Samuel T. Wilmit, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Carol Seaman, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Joseph AbuUarrage, M.D. FredS. Barash, M.D.,

Ph.D. Linda D'Angelo, M.S. Mysore R. Gandhi, M.S. Dorcas Koeningsberger,

M.S. Joel S. Lipset, M.A. Dolores McCann, M.S. Ernest J. Millman, Ph.D. Catherine Muttart, M.S. Ulana Sanocka, M.D. Regina Santella, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES {continued)

Robin Schwartz, M.S. Thomas Soulos, M.S. Mark D. Starr, Ph.D. Phyllis Taterka, M.S. Christine L. Zucker, M.S.

LECTURERS Albert Aharon, M.D. Armond V. Mascia, M.D. Yaakov Shechter, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogens Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Joe H. Cannon. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1942; M.D., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS Pedro Alarcon, M.D. Allan S. Cunningham, M.D. John G. Freehafer, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor

Erich J. Kahn. M.B., B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1940

Associate Professor

Margaret Heagerty. B.A., Seton Hill, 1957; B.S., West Virginia, 1959; M.D., Pennsyl- vania, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Wiener Leblanc. B.S., Haiti, 1950; M.D., 1956

Gene-Ann Polk. B.A., Oberlin, 1948; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylva- nia, 1952; M.P.H., Columbia, 1958

Assistant Professor

Barbara C. Dangman. B.S., Bucknell, 1968; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1972 Ilene Fennoy. B.A., Stanford, 1968; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1973 Mark Rapoport. B.A., M.D., Boston, 1970; M.P.H., Howard, 1973

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Araceli R. Ancajas. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1961

Josephine Kerr. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., New York University, 1951

Yusuf M. Khakoo. M.B., B.S., Bombay, 1962

PEDIATRICS 101

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning. B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D. College of Pennsylvania, 1 949

Women s Medical

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Beverly Anderson

Viruppamattam Augustin, M.B., B.S.

Serge Fenelon, M.D.

Wilfrid Florvil

Delore J. Gayle-Thompson, M.D.

Anne Hutcheon, M.A., M.D.

Robert Hutcheon, M.D.

Vincent E. Hutchinson, M.B., B.S.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Petronella Manning-AUegre, M.D. Rochelle Scott, M.D. Marguerita A. Silvera, M.D. Claudina Y. Wallace, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS Kuang-Chung Hu Chien, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

Solomon J. Cohen. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1951 Gloria Schrager. B. A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.D. , Woman's Medical College of Pennsylva- nia, 1948

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joseph I. Boylan. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Yale, 1955

Frederick C. Braun, Jr. B.S., Georgetown, 1951; M.D., Jefferson, 1955

Burton M. Feinsmith. B.S., Arkansas, 1949; M.S., Florida, 1951; M.D., Berne, 1961

George M. Gill. B.S., Dickinson, 1954; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1958

Benjamin H. Josephson. B.S., North Carolina, 1949; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1952 Joseph Kalbacher. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Cornell, 1946 John H. Krikorian, B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1963 Carolkay Lissenden. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Woman's Medical College of

Philadelphia, 1964 Lewis I . Sank . B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1 95 7; M.D., 1961 Frederic A. Schulaner. B.S., Tufts, 1955; M.D., 1959 Margaret E. Symonds. M.B., London, 1941; B.S., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Arnold N. Constad, M.D. Paul A. Kearney, M.D. Barry Lauton, M.D. Wayne D. Stettler, M.D. Charles B. Terhune, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Paul Avondoglio, M.D. Howard S. Britt, M.D. Frank P. Frenda, M.D. Carl H. Herman, M.D. Alexander R. Horowitz,

M.D. Victor S. Lamberto, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Vinnakota V. P. Rao, M.D. Dudley A. Roberts, M.D. Stanislawa Rosnowski,

M.D. Arvind P. Shah, M.D. James Sorger, M.D. Sandy P. Waran, M.D.

At St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Pediatrics

Louis Z. Cooper. B.S., Yale, 1954; M.D., 1957

102 PEDIATRICS

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Doris L. Wethers. B.S., Queens (New York), 1958; M.D., Yale, 1952

Associate Clinical Professors

Helen Rodriguez-Trias. B.S., Puerto Rico, 1957; M.D., 1960 Phillip R. Ziring. B.A., New York University, 1958; M.D., 1962

Assistant Professor

Elena B. Klein. M.D., State Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1953; Ph.D., Institute of Microbiology (Rumania), 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatric Psychology

Madeline W. Appell. B.A., Queens, 1962; M.A., 1963

Jeanne Brooks-Gunn. B.A., Connecticut College, 1969; Ed.M., Harvard, 1970; Ph.D.,

Pennsylvania, 1975 Nathan A. Fox. B.A., Williams, 1970; Ph.D., Harvard, 1975

Assistant Clinical Professors

Dennis Allendorf. B.S., Georgetown, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College, 1970

Anastasios Anastasiades. M.D., Athens, 1950

Robert Antar. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1970

Saroj Sahgal Bakshi. M.B., B.S., Government Medical College (India), 1960; M.D.,

Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (India), 1969 Herbert I. Cohen. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

Gisela T. Dairy mple. M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1951 Donald L. Feinberg. B.A., Hamilton, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949 Zachary Finkelberg. B.S., Queens (New York), 1962; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1966 Joan M. Flanigan. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1962; M.D., 1966 Erwin Friedman (Pediatric Psychology). Ph.D., Peter (Budapest), 1949 Fadel M. Hochroth. B.A., Louisville, 1953; M.D., 1957

Harry Kimmel. B.A., St. Andrews (Bucharest), 1940; M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Katherine Lodyjensky. M.D., Montreal, 1943 Neil Lombardi (also Neurology). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967 Rogelio F. Lucas. A. A., University of the East (Manila), 1956; M.D., 1961 Anthony F. Michel. M.D., Faculte de Medecine (Haiti), 1956 Mona Milstein. B.A., State University of New York (Binghamton), 1965; M.D. State

University of New York (Buffalo), 1969 Richard Mones. B.A., Brooklyn, 1967; M.D., New York Medical College, 1971 Lucie Rudd . B.S., Paris, 1 933; M.D., 1 940

Marianne Schwob. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Farrokh Shahrivar. M.D., Tehran, 1966 Shantha Subramaniam. M.B., B.S., Madras (India), 1962 Lucy M. Swift. B.A., Barnard, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Phienjit Tantibhedhyangkul. M.D., Mahido (Thailand), 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Sayenna A. Uduman. D.M.E.S., Kilpauk (India), 1963; M.D., Madras, 1966 Ranjeet Virdi. B.S., India, 1960; M.D., 1960 Elizabeth Watkins. B.A., Randolph-Macon Women's College, 1947; M.D., Columbia,

1951

PEDIATRICS PHARMACOLOGY 103

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Ricarda L. Baum, M.D. Joseph A. Cannaliato, M.D. Ragabardial R. Dwarka,

M.D. Renata Frenkel, M.D. Diane Hochlerin, M.D. Ruth E. Kessler, M.D. Edward A. Nichols, M.D. Thelma Verano-Santiago,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Robert William Amler, M.D.

Myrna Aquino Damian,

M.D. Carlois Emilio Arzeno, M.D. William R. Brown, M.D. Morel Duverseau, M.D. Rita H. Fischer, M.D. Luis Antonio Goyco, M.D. Robert L. Hite, M.D. Nancy C. Holahan, M.D. Christodoulos lordanou,

M.D. Kusum Khanna, M.B., B.S. Priscilla W. Lewis, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued) Richard Gary Merkler,

M.D. Flora Ramirez, M.D. Melanie Rivenzon, M.D. Nathan E. Saint-Amand,

M.D. Kathryn H. Sussman,

M.D. Michael Glen Teitel, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Thomas H. Hyatt, Jr., M.D.

Pharmacology

David Hosack Professor and Chairman

Brian F. Hoffman. A. A., Princeton, 1943; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1947

Professors

J. Thomas Bigger, Jr. (also Medicine). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960

Frederick G. Hofmann. B.A., Michigan, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1952

Norman Kahn (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1954; D.D.S., 1958;

Ph.D., 1964 Harold C. Neu (also Medicine). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Anesthesiology). M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1944 Michael R. Rosen (also Pediatrics). B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1964 Wilbur H. Sawyer (Gustavus and Louise Pfeiffer Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1942;

M.D., 1945; Ph.D., 1950 Hsueh-Hwa Wang. M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1946 Andrew L. Wit. B.S., Bates, 1963; Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Adjunct Professors

Paul F. Cranefield. Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1946; Ph.D., 1951; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964

Jurg Schneider. M.D., Basle (Switzerland), 1945

Sidney Spector (also Anesthesiology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jeffer- son, 1956

Robert M. Weiss. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1960

Adjunct Associate Professors

Marvin R. Blumenthal. B.S., Michigan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949 Martin M. Winbury. B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.S., Maryland, 1942; Ph.D., New York University, 1954

104 PHARMACOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY

Senior Research Associate

Lance L. Simpson. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., California, 1969

Assistant Professors

Larry Crawshaw (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1964;

Ph.D., California (Santa Barbara), 1970 Peter Danilo, Jr. Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Daniel J. Goldberg. Ph.D., Yale, 1974 Jaya Haldar. M.Sc, Calcutta, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1966 Douglas N. Ishii (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959 Lou Katz (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959 Tuan Due Pham (also Anatomy). B.S., St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S., Loyola,

1967; M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 Richard B. Robinson. Ph.D., Illinois, 1975 Steven L. Roffman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1965; M.S., New York University,

1963; Ph.D., 1973

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Edward B. Kirsten. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson,

1966; Ph.D., City College, 1969 Lawrence Tilley. D.V.M., Iowa State, 1969

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Kenneth Dangman, Ph.D. Samuel M. Ross, B.E.E. (Electrical Engineering)

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Arline Albala Pamela Garlick

1962; M.S., New York University,

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Ofer Binah

Penelope Altman Boyden,

Ph.D. Florence Chan, M.D. Irinia Golyakhovsky, Ph.D. Kenneth W. Hewett,

Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES {continued)

Jorg Dietrich Schoenen, M.D.

LECTURER

Kwang Soo Lee, M.D.

Physiology

John C. Dalton Professor and Chairman

John V. Taggart (also Medicine). M.D., Southern California, 1940

Professors

Shu Chien. M.B., National Taiwan, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957

Eric R. Kandel (also Psychiatry). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University,

1956 Irving Kupfermann (also Psychiatry). Ph.D., Chicago, 1964 William L. Nastuk. B.S., Rutgers, 1939; Ph.D., 1945

Mero Nocenti. B.A., West Virginia, 1951; M.S., 1952; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955 John P. Reuben (in Neurology). B.A., Grinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D.,

Florida, 1959 David Schachter. B.S., New York University, 1946; M.D., 1949

James H. Schwartz (also Neurology). B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York Universi- ty, 1959; Ph.D., Rockefeller. 1964

PHYSIOLOGY PSYCHIATRY 105

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Medicine). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1962

Martin Blank. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957:

Ph.D., Cambridge, 1959 Louis J. Cizek. B.S., Fordham, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941 Raimond Emmers. B.A., East Texas Baptist, 1953; M.A., North Carolina, 1955;

Ph.D., Syracuse, 1958 Michel Ferin (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Louvain, 1964 Jorge Fischbarg (in Ophthalmology). M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago.

1971 Claude P. J. Ghez (also Neurology). B. Sc, Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard. 1964

Senior Research Associate

Shunichi Usami. M.B., Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine (Japan). 1940; Ph.D. 1957

Assistant Professors

Kung-Ming Jan. M.B., National Taiwan, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 John D. Koester. B.A., Wooster (Ohio), 1965; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Herbert H. Lipowsky. M.D., Moscow State Medical Institute, 1954; Ph.D., 1962;

D.Sc.M., Research Institute of Clinical and Experimental Surgery (Moscow), 1960 Hugh Nellans (also Medicine). B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATES

Richard E. Abbott, Ph.D. Robert G. King, B.Sc.

Jack T. Alexander, B.S. Shiomoh Simchon

Ronald D. Carlin, Ph.D. Lily M. Soo, Ph.D. Szloma Kowarski, M.A. Mary M. L. Lee, Ph.D.

Psychiatry

Laurence Kolb Professor and Chairman

Edward J. Sachar. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1956

At New York State Psychiatric Institute

Professors

Eric R. Kandel (also Physiology). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D.. New York University,

1956 Donald F. Klein. B.A., Colby, 1947; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Irving Kupferman (also Physiology). Ph.D., Chicago, 1964 Robert L. Spitzer. B.A., Cornell, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957 Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia.

1951

106 PSYCHIATRY

Professor of Biochemistry

Maurice M. Rapport. B.S., City College of New York, 1940; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1946

Professors of Medical Psychology

Samuel Sutton. Ph.D., Chicago, 1955 William N. Thetford. Ph.D., Chicago, 1949

Professor of Neuropathology

Leon Roizin. B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia). 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1936

Professor of Social Sciences

Bruce Dohrenwend (also Public Health). B.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Cornell, 1955

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gene G. Abel. M.D., Iowa, 1965

H. Donald Dunton (in Pediatrics). M.D., Rochester, 1945

L. Erlenmeyer-Kimling (in Human Genetics). B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1960

Ronald R. Fieve. B.A., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1955

Archie R. Foley (in Public Health). B.A., Queens (Canada), 1943; M.D., CM., 1947;

M.S., Columbia, 1962 Lothar Gidro-Frank. M.D., Columbia, 1948 Alexander H. Glassman. B.A., Illinois, 1956; M.D., 1958 Barry K. Gurland. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1955

Joseph Jaffe. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., New York University, 1947 Donald S. Kornfeld. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1950; M.D., Yale, 1954 Sidney Malitz. B.S., Tulane, 1943; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1946 John D. Rainer (in Human Genetics). M.D., Columbia, 1951 James H. Ryan. B.A., Yale, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 David Shaffer (also Pediatrics). M.D., London, 1961

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner (in Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Clinical Professors

Willard Gaylin. B.A., Harvard, 1947; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1951

Roger MacKinnon. M.D., Columbia, 1950

Lionel Ovesey. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1937; M.D., 1941

Herbert Spiegel. B.S., Maryland, 1936; M.D., 1939

John Weber. B.A., Duke, 1939; M.D., Yale, 1943

Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

Rita Rudel. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1946; M.A., 1949; Ph.D., New York University, 1955

Associate Professor of Dentistry

Austin H. Kutscher. B.A., New York University, 1945; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946

PSYCHIATRY 107

Associate Professor of Medical Psychology

Jacques Rutschmann. D. Sc, Geneva, 1956

Associate Professor of Neuropathology

Mavis Kaufman. M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Associate Professor of Public Health (Sociomedical Sciences)

Denise Kandel. Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurobiology and Behavior

Vincent F. Castellucci. B.A., Laval, 1960; B.Sc, 1964; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1968

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurochemistry

Hadassah Tamir. M.S., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1955; Ph.D., Israel Institute of Technolo- gy, 1959

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Liselotte Graf. M.D., Vienna, 1937

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Ruth Bennett. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

David L. Dunner. A. A., George Washington, 1960; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1965 Jerrold S. Maxmen. B.A., Wayne State, 1963; M.D., 1967 Frederic M. Quitkin. B.A., Princeton, 1958; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1962

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychology

W. Crawford Clark. Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Anke Ehrhardt. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1969 Jean Endicott. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Rachel Gittelman-Klein. B.A., City College of New York, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychopharmacology

James M. Perel. Ph.D., New York University, 1964

Associate Clinical Professors

Paul A. Bradlow. M.D., Hahnemann, 1946

Richard G. Druss. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Gloria Faretra. M.D., Georgetown, 1952

Richard A. Gardner. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956

Rodman Gilder, Jr. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Stanley Heller. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Winslow R. Hunt. B.A., Chicago, 1946; M.A., 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1958

108 PSYCHIATRY

Alexander N. Levay. M.D., Rochester, 1957

Robert S. Liebert. B.S., Syracuse, 1951; M.A., Clark, 1956; M.D., New York

University, 1960 Mary C. MacKay. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1959

Donald I. Meyers. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1946; M.D., Jefferson, 1950 Helen C. Meyers. B.A., Hunter, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949 John F. O'Connor. B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York, 1952 Ethel Person. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960 Seymour Post. M.D., New York University, 1947 Daniel Shapiro. M.D., Illinois, 1945

Leonard M. Sheehy. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., McGill, 1968 Henry I. Spitz. B.A., Lafayette (Pennsylvania), 1961; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1965 Ralph N. Wharton. M.D., Columbia, 1957

Associate Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Kenneth Frank. M.S., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., 1967 Heino F.L. Meyer-Bahlburg. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1970

Associate Clinical Professors of Psychiatric Social Work

Bluma Swcrdloff . D.S.W., Columbia, 1960 Winifred Winikus. M.S., Columbia, 1949

Assistant Professors

Craig H. Bailey (also Anatomy). B.A., Lehigh, 1967; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., 1973 Samuel M. Schacher (also Biochemistry). B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.A., 1974; Ph.D.,

1976 Klaudiusz Weiss (also Biochemistry) (in Dentistry). M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State

University of New York (Stony Brook), 1973

Assistant Professors of Biochemistry

George Alexander. B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953 Herbert L. Meltzer. B.S., Long Island, 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950

Assistant Professor of Medical Psychology

Thomas J. Carew. M.A., California (Riverside), 1967; Ph.D., 1970

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gregory Asnis. B.S., Dickinson College, 1968; M.D., Hahnemann, 1972

Miron Baron. M.D., Tel Aviv, 1972

Jerry Finkel. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

David V. Forrest. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

Laurence L. Greenhill. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967

Kenneth Greenspan. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963

Frederick Kass. B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970

Michael R. Liebowitz. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., 1969

Joaquim Puig-Antich. B.A., LaSalle Bonanova (Spain), 1960; M.D., Barcelona

(Spain), 1967 Ronald O. Rieder. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., 1968

PSYCHIATRY 109

Lawrence Sharpe. D.P.M., London, 1961

Andrew Skodol. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1971

Bernard T. Walsh. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Harvard, 1972

Daniel T. Williams. B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Cornell, 1969

Stuart C. Yudofsky. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Baylor, 1970

Philip Zeidenburg. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychology

Judith V. Becker. M.S., Eastern Washington State, 1968; Ph.D., Southern Mississippi, 1975

Miriam Cohen. B.A., Michigan, 1961; M.S., Pittsburgh, 1964; Ph.D., 1967

Donald J. Dillon. Ph.D., Fordham, 1955

Kenneth A. Frank. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Donald E. Hutchings (also Pediatrics). Ph.D., Columbia, 1965

Maureen Kanzler. B.A., Hunter, 1938; M.A., New York University, 1940; M.S., Hunter, 1959; Ph.D., Fordham, 1967

Stephen E. Karpiak. Ph.D., Fordham, 1972

Dennis D. Kelly. Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

Dolores Kreisman. B.A., Barnard, 1953; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969

Cornells Stokman. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Klaudiusz Weiss. M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony- brook), 1973

Stuart C. Yudofsky. B.A., New York University, 1965; M.D., Baylor, 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Social Work

Janet B. Williams. B.S., Tufts, 1969; M.S., Southeastern Massachusetts, 1972; M.S.W., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Social Sciences

Alexander Askenazy. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Muriel Hammer. Ph.D., Columbia, 1961

Carol C. Schwartz. B.S., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., Yale, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Nettie Terestman. M.S. W., Columbia, 1940; D.S. W., 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

Morton J. Aronson. B.A., Temple, 1944; M.D., 1947 Athanasia Balkoura. M.D., Athens, 1960

Amiram Barkai. M.Sc, Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1963; Ph.D., 1970 Leah Beck. M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1943 Christian C. Beels. B.A., Rochester, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1963 Anne E. Bernstein. B.A., Barnard, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Paul F. Califano. B.A., Adelphi, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1954 Robert J. Campbell. M.D., Columbia, 1948

Ian Alberto Canino. B.S., Georgetown, 1966; M.D., Puerto Rico, 1970 William J. Chambers. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Tufts, 1972 Harvey R. Chertoff. B.A., Columbia, 1962; M.D., Einstein, 1966 Max P. Cohen. M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Louise Coleman. M.D., Southern California, 1948

110 PSYCHIATRY

Francine Cournos. B.S., City College (New York), 1967; M.D., New York University,

1971 DeWitt L. Crandell. M.D., Arkansas, 1955 Barbara H. De Betz. M.D., Miami, 1970 Zira De Fries. M.D., New York Medical College, 1942 Olga Diz-Pi. B.S., Havana, 1953; M.D., Salamanca (Spain), 1964 Robert M. Elvolve. B.A., Michigan, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966 James W. Flax. B.A., Antioch, 1971; M.D., Minnesota, 1974 Bruce Forester. B.A., Dartmouth, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965 Eugene A. Friedberg. M.D., Buffalo, 1958

Bimalendu Ganguly. M.B., B.S., Calcutta Medical College (India), 1964 Lee R. Gardner. B.A., Barnard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959 Myron R. Gershberg. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.A., 1956; M.D., Buffalo, 1960 Richard J. Glavin. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Rochester, 1955 Ana B. Glick. B.A., Bennington, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1963 Robert Glick. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Edwin Goldstein (in Pediatrics). B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958 Charles Goodstein. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1962 Jerome D. Goodman. M.D., Pennsylvania, 1959 Gary J . Grad . B.A., Illinois, 1 969; M.D., 1 965

Rose Hartmann. B.A., New York University, 1937; M.D., Woman's Medical, 1945 Steven E. Hyler. B.A., New York University, 1971; M.D., New York Medical College,

1975 David Iverson. B.A., Rochester, 1963; M.D., Boston, 1968 David Jaf f e . M.D., Jefferson, 1 950

Frank S. Jewett. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Lila J . Kalinich . B.A., North western, 1 966; M.D., 1 969 Neil B. Kavey. B.A., Princeton, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Peter Laderman. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., New York

Medical College, 1947 Frederick Lane. B.A., Cornell, 1949; M.D., Yale, 1953 Norman D. Lazar. M.D., Louisville, 1948 Burton Lerner. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957

Steven J. Levitan. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., Buffalo, 1965 Henry L. McCurtis. B.S., Texas Southern, 1968; M.D., Stanford, 1974 Eric R. Marcus (also Social Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969 Frederick Mendelsohn. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Stanford, 1958 Michael Milano. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964 Bobba Jean Moody. B.A., Hunter, 1964; M.S. W., Fordham, 1968 Robert S. Mumford. M.D., McGill, 1943

Jaime Nos. M.P.H., Columbia, 1975; M.D., Valencia (Spain), 1967 Louis Padovano. B.S., Georgetown, 1952; M.D., 1956 Robert P. Parkin. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1950 David Peretz. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.A., Columbia, 1955;

M.D., New York University, 1959 Kathryn F. Prescott. M.D., New York University, 1950 Boris Rubinstein. B.A., Colegio Israelita (Mexico City), 1961; M.D., Nacional (Mexico),

1970; M.P.H., Harvard, 1974 Irene B. Seeland. M.D., Heidelberg, 1965 Edward M. Shelley. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1964 Charles Siegal. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1958 Frieda H. Spady. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967 Jerome Steiner. B.A., Chicago, 1949; M.A., 1951; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1962

PSYCHIATRY 111

Jonathan W. Stewart. B.A., Swarthmore, 1967; M.D., Yale, 1971

Kenneth G. Terkelsen. B.A., Georgetown, 1965; M.D., Jefferson, 1969

Gloria M. Warner. M.D., New York, 1959

Martin Weiler. B.A., Syracuse, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Chicago Medical

School, 1954 Josef H. Weissberg. M.S., Albany Medical College, 1952 George H. Wilkie. M.D., Harvard, 1957

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Public Health

Judith Rabkin. B.A., Wellesley, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1967; M.P.H., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Irwin Mansdorf. M.A., Adelphi, 1973; Ph.D., 1976

Letty Munz. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., College of the City of New York, 1952; Ph.D., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatric Social Work

Susan Matorin. B.A. Vassar, 1964; M.S.W., Columbia, 1966

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Syed Abdullah, M.D. Harry D. Albert, M.D. John Atchley, M.D. Burton August, M.D. Stephen Bennett, M.D. Stanley Coen, M.D. Leonard Diamond, M.D. Gerald I. Fogel, M.D. Alvin J. Glick, M.D. Ivan Goldberg, M.D. Gurston Goldin, M.D. Gregory Heimarck, M.D. Milton Lee, M.D. Leo Lefer, M.D. Naomi Leiter, M.D. Stanley Lituchy, M.D. Virginia Lozzi, M.D. Ira L. Mintz, M.D. Philip R. Muskin, M.D. M. Bruce Sarlin, M.D. Gerda Striker, M.D. Ann R. Turkel, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Samuel W. Anderson,

Ph.D. David P. Birkett, M.D.,

B.Ch. Richard L. Blumenthal,

Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES {continued)

Melinda Broman, Ph.D. Diana C. Cook Barbara Ann Cornblatt Richard S. Feldman, M.D. Anita K. Fischer, Ph.D. David Friedman Maria Janena Hurwic,

M.D. Mitchell L. Kietzman,

M.D. Morton Levitt, Ph.D. Yvonne Marcuse John Nee

Arthur S. Perumey Stephanie Portnoy Neil J. Risch Kurt Salzinger, Ph.D. Suzanne Salzinger, M.D. David Wilder, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Sahebarao P. Mahadik,

Ph.D. A.S. Perumal, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Peter Aldin, M.D. Ilena L. Appleby, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Anne Bartlett, M.D. Robinette N. Bell, M.D. Raymond Bernick, M.D. Herbert Bichovsky,

M.S.W. Stanley Bone, M.D. Abraham A. Bridger, M.D. Sydney C. Bush, M.D. Leon Chattah, M.D. Daniel Elliott Cohen, M.D. Frances Cohen, M.D. Tecla Linda Critelli, M.S. Dominick De Fabio, M.D. Paul S. Ducker, M.D. Katherine Falk, M.D. Abby Joy Fyer, M.D. lona H. Ginsburg, M.D. Madeiyn S. Gould, M.P.H. Wilma Marsha Harrison,

M.D. Myra S. Hatterer, M.D. Michelle L. Hirsch, M.D. Joel S. Hoffman, M.D. Martin J. Hoffman, M.S. Arthur R. Jacobs, M.D. Roberta Jaeger, M.D. Stanislaw P. Jonas, M.D. Bonnie Kaufman, M.D. Thomas Kramjac, M.D. Richard A. Kresch, M.D.

112 PSYCHIATRY

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

David Barry Leibow, M.D. David Y. Levine, M.D. Peter C. Martindale, M.D. Brian L. Maruffi, M.A. Patricia J. McGrath, Jr. David D. Olds, M.D. Patricio R. Paez. M.D. Jeffrey M. Pines, M.D. Leslie Lynne Powers,

M.D. Phyllis B. Robbins, M.D. Steven Paul Roose, M.D. Lyle E. Rosnick, M.D. Arnold Rothstein, M.D. Robert SantuUi, M.D. David P. Schiebel, M.D. Karl John Schroeder,

M.D. Jonathan R. Schwartz,

M.D. Thomas E. Sedlock, M.D. Beth June Seelig, M.D. Samuel Simmens, M.A. Lawrence Shaderowfsky,

M.D. Michael Shostak, M.D. Linda J. Skinner, M.D. Marjorie Jane Smith, M.D. Gloria Jean Stern, M.D. Fay Stetner Alan J. Tuckman, M.D. Stephen G. Underwood,

M.D. Hector Oswaldo Varas,

M.D. David J. Weiser, M.D. Richard W. Weiss, M.D. Thomas J. Yager, M.D. Beth K. Yudofsky

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY Susan Cohen, Ph.D. Richard P. Cressen, Ph.D. Patricia Ann O'Connor,

Ph.D. Michael Seth Quittman,

Ph.D. Linda J. Skinner, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL

WORK

Eleanor F. Smyth, M.S.W.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Carla Daichman, M.S.W. Patricia Fink, M.S.W. Miriam Gibson, M.S.W. Elizabeth Golden, M.S.W. Jill Gitlin Jones, M.S.W. Ann C. Walton-Kantzler Sally Lord, M.S.W. Jill Stutz

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Bruce Y. Bleecker, M'.D. Susan Braiman, M.D. Charles Carluccio, M.D. Doris M. Mortenson, M.D. Esther Ridder, M.D. Barbara C. Sacco, R.N. Marilyn Sande-Friedman,

M.D. Charles Shatlenkirk, M.D. Rishon Stember, M.D. Grace C.K. Sum, M.D. Nestor J. Totero, M.D. Abram Zevy, M.S.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Alfreda H. Howard, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Laura Lee Dean, B.A. Joan Layton, M.A. Mary W. Masland, M.S. Margaret Shannon

SPECIAL LECTURERS Viola W. Bernard, M.D. John A. Cook, M.D. Katrina De Hirsch, B.A. Marjorie H. Frank Olga Frankel, M.D. Murray Glusman, M.D. George Goldman, M.D. Soil Goodman, M.D. George A. Jervis, M.D. Henriette R. Klein, M.D. Lawrence C. Kolb, M.D. Bernard Pacella, M.D. Helen Schucman, M.D. Herbert Spiegel, M.D. Leo Srole, Ph.D. Alberta Szalita, M.D. Exie E. Welsch, M.D. Joseph Zubin, M.D.

LECTURERS

Kenneth Z. Altshuler,

M.D. Jacob A. Arlow, M.D. Stuart S. Asch, M.D. Bruce Ballard, M.D. Beatrice Beebe, Ph.D. Milton M. Berger, M.D. Hector Bird, M.D. Marion S. Blank, Ph.D. Henry Brill, M.D GerarH]E. BrudefT

larry~?C. Cohen, M. Arnold M. Cooper, M.D. Paul William DeBell, M.D.

jwrence Deutsche Samuel L. Feder, M.D. Allen Frances, M.D. Sheldon Gaylin, M.D. Barbara Gillam-

Lawargren, Ph.D. Eugene L. Goldberg, M.D. David S. Goldman, M.D. Arthur Green, M.D. William I. Grossman,

Ph.D. Ernest M. Gruenberg, M.D.

Gad Hakerma, Ph.D.

Howard F. Hunt, Ph.D.

Jerome Jaffe, M.D.

Joel Katz, M.D.

Steven E. Katz, M.D.

Otto F. Kernberg, M.D.

Paulina Kernberg, M.D.

Erica Loutsch, M.D.

Abbas Nahas, M.D.

John M. Oldham, M.D.

Paul Rosenbaum, M.D.

Bennett L. Rosner, M.D.

Franklin D. Russek, M.D.

Harold Sackeim, Ph.D.

Michael Sacks, M.P.H.

Roy Schafer, Ph.D.

Jonah W. Schein, M.D.

Jesse Schomer, M.D.

Jay Schulman, M.D.

Gerri Ellen Schwartz, Ph.D.

Bonnie Jean Spring, Ph.D.

Leo Stone, M.D.

Milton Viederman, M.D.

Martin S. WiUick, M.D.

Sheldon Zimberg, M.D.

PSYCHIATRY 113

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Harvey Gurian. M.D., Toronto, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

John E. Denny. Ph.D., Massachusetts, 1971

Charles J. Hudson. B.A., Princeton, 1959; M.D., McGill, 1963

Charles W. Lamb. Ph.D., Ohio State, 1966

Associates in Clinical Psychiatry

Peter M. Johngren, M.D. Eugene J. Pilek, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Virginia N. Wilking. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Associate Clinical Professors

Gladys Egri. M.D., Madrid, 1955; M.S., Columbia, 1965

William A. Ellis, Jr. B.S., Howard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Margaret M. Lawrence. B.A., Cornell, 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1940

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Seymour Gers. B.S., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1956 Emery S. Hetrick. B.A., Ohio State, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1957 Austin Moore. B.S., Queens, 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959 Peter H. Schween. M.D., Hamburg, 1955

Assistant Clinical Professors

Irwin J. Averbach. B.S., Michigan, 1949; M.D., Buffalo, 1954

Shale Brownstein. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1955; M.D., 1959 Noble A. Endicott. B.A., Texas, 1951; M.D., 1955

Jeffrey Hammer. B.A., Adelphi, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1967 Carol Leal. B.S., Louisiana State, 1963; M.D., Howard, 1967

Gideon Nachumi. B.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1958 Raymond W. Ransom. B.S., Howard, 1962; M.D., 1967 Raymond Raskin. B.A., New York University, 1942; M.D., 1946

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS {continued)

PSYCHIATRY PSYCHIATRY j j^^^^^ Lindo, M.D.

Joseph C. Napoli, M.D. Sumanasiri Alahendra, Sideny M. Lytton M.D

Pauline E. Thompson, M.B.B.S. Michael V. Osborn, M.D.

M.D.

114 PSYCHIATRY

INSTRUCTORS (continued) INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

Sady Sulton, M.D. PSYCHOLOGY

Anthony F. Villamena, Carol Garmiza, Ph.D.

M.D. Robert L. Walton, M.D.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lloyd A. Hamilton, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Harvard, 1954

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY Martin V. Hart, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Harley C. Shands. B.S., Tulane, 1936; M.D., 1939

Associate Clinical Professor

Gary Lee Lefer. B.S., Stanford, 1962; M.D., Georgetown, 1966 Adam Munz. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Shepard J. Kantor. B.A., Colby, 1965; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Gail B. Allen. B.A., Wellesley, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961

Frederic A. Ailing. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Alex Caemmerer, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947

Irene Chiarandini. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1963

Ralph Colp, Jr. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1948

Nathaniel Donson. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., New York University, 1962

John A. Fogelman. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1964 Leo Kron. M.D., British Columbia, 1971 Samuel C. Klagsbrun. B.R.E., Jewish Theological Seminary, 1954; B.A., College of

the City of New York, 1955; M.D., Chicago, 1962 David M. McDonald. B.S., Oregon, 1945; M.D., Tufts, 1949 Eugene Mahon. M.D., National (Ireland), 1964

John A. Milici. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Geneva (Switzerland), 1957 Paul William Nassar. B.A., New York University, 1963; M.D., Rome, 1968 Kenneth Porter. B.A., Harvard, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1969 Harry R. Potter. B.S., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Stephen P. Reibel. B.A., Harvard, 1957; M.D., 1961 John W. Rosenberger. B.A., Dartmouth, 1956; M.D. CM., McGill, 1960 Sirgay Sanger. B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., 1960 George Satran. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

PSYCHIATRY 115

Robert D. Scharf. B.S., Union, 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1970

Ira B. Silverstein. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1964

Richard C. Wallace. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Howard K. Welsh. B.S., City College (New York), 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971

Harvey L. White. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., New York Medical College, 1964

C. Philip Wilson. B.A., Yale, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

Assistant Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

James D. Meltzer. B.A., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., New York University, 1973 Arthur Weider. Ph.D., New York University, 1946

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

PSYCHIATRY

William H. Brownlee,

M.D. Lucy E. Collins, M.D. Blanche Glass, Ph.D. Justin L. Greene, M.D. Sonia W. Hyman, M.D. Martin I. Lubin, M.D. Arthur M. Perlman, M.D. Harry Reiss, M.D. Barbara R. Rosenfeld,

M.D. Mitchell S. Rosenthal,

M.D. Diane L. Stone, M.D. William M. Tucker, M.D. William D. Wheat, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL

PSYCHOLOGY

Alma Levinson, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PSYCHIATRY

Savador Eduoardo Algaze,

M.D. Cyrus Aroomloui, M.D. Michael E. Barberie, M.D. Charles Lee Bell, M.D. Kenneth M. Berc, M.D. Arlene C. Caldwell, M.D. Victor D'Arc, M.D. Paolo Decina, M.D. Leonard Deutsch, M.D. Laura Duval, M.D. Osvaldo J. Evangelista,

M.D. Harold H. Fogelman, M.D. Joanne Leslie Foster,

M.D. Stephen C. Glassberg,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Maurice Haberman, M.D. Charles L. Ihlenfeld, M.D. Charles G. Jackson, Jr.,

M.D. David K. Jordan, M.D. Willard S. Kahn, M.D. Jerome Edward Kaufman,

M.D. Robert J. Kent, M.D. Daniel Koblentz, M.D. liana Kochen, M.D. Woon Soon Lee, M.D. Ernesto Lozano, M.D. James M. McGowan Enrique Madrigal-Segura,

M.D. James L. Maher, M.D. Henry Clay Mallard, M.D. Donald Mayerson, M.D.

Howard Millman, M.D. Jeffry R. Nurenberg, M.D.

Henry A. Paul, M.D.

Michael A. Pawel, M.D.

Antonio G. Pena, M.D.

Michael Piercy, M.D.

Arthur S. Piatt, D.O.

Ellen M. Piatt, M.D.

Henry A. Remet, M.D.

Corey Nyles Rigberg, M.D.

Jeffrey H. Sacks, M.D.

Ranja Katerina Schilot, M.D.

Christina M. Sekaer, M.D.

Barry L. Singer, M.D.

William G. Sommer, M.D.

Melvin L. Thrash, M.D.

Joel Tricarico, M.D.

Martha C. Troutman, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Maria L.C. Velez, M.D. Alexander V.

Voitashevsky, M.D. Joel Wallack, M.D. David S. Weinberger,

M.D. Olin West, M.D. Irma Zelig, M.D. Rev. Barry G. Wood

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY Robert A. Cutick, Ph.D. Andrew B. Druch, Ph.D. James D. Meltzer, Ph.D. Ruth W. Mollod, Ph.D. Joan Schaeffer, Ph.D. Roy Shapiro, Ph.D. Michael Stern, M.A.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Hanne E. Favelukes, M.D. Gregory Fischer, M.D. Shirin Ghaemma-Ghami Edward E. Gilmour, M.D. Joel Gonchar, M.D. Alan Kouzmanoff, M.D. Reed C.E. Moskowitz,

M.D. Andrzej Nikonorow, M.D. Keith Sedlacek, M.D. David Z. Starr, M.D. Victor Syrmis, M.D. Charles F. Yackulic, M.D.

LECTURER Wayne A. Myers

SPECIAL LECTURERS John Cotton, M.D. Lilli C. Shalsa, M.D.

116 PUBLIC HEALTH

Public Health

Delamar Professor, Dean, and Chairman

Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine) (also Psychiatry). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Biostatistics

Professors

Joseph L. Fleiss. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.S., 1961; Ph.D., 1967

John Van Ryzin. B.S., Marquette, 1957; M.S., 1959; Ph.D., Michigan State, 1964

Adjunct Professor

Carl H. Erhardt. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1941; M.P.A., New York University, 1957; M.S., Harvard, 1958; D.Sc, 1962

Associate Professor

Agnes P. Berger. Ph.D., Budapest, 1939; M.A., Columbia, 1944

Senior Research Associates

Neal W. Chilton. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; D.D.S., New York

University, 1943; M.P.H., Columbia, 1946 Allen S. Ginsberg (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.M.E., Cornell,

1958; M. I.E., 1959; Ph.D., Stanford, 1970

Assistant Professors

Robert R. Golden. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1960; M.S., Oregon State,

1963; Ph.D., Minnesota, 1976 Bruce Levin (Mathematical Statistics). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.A., Harvard, 1972;

Ph.D., 1974 Patrick E. Shrout (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., St. Louis, 1972; Ph.D., Chicago,

1976 Sylvan Wallenstein. B.S., City College, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Sol Blumenthal. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.B.A., New York

University, 1958; Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1969 Joseph Breuer. M.D., Vienna, 1937; M.P.H, Columbia, 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D.,

1969 Turkan K. Gardenier. B.A., Vassar, 1961; M.A., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., 1966 Donald C. Ross. B.A., Rochester, 1955; M.A., North Carolina, 1957; Ph.D., 1960

INSTRUCTORS RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Carol A. Bodian, M.S. Jennie K. Kline, Ph.D. (in the Sergievsky

Frieda Nelson, B.A. Center)

Alex Tytun, M.S. Molly Park, M.A.

Robert A. Strauss, M.D.

Livia R. Turgeon, M.S.

PUBLIC HEALTH 117

Environmental Health Sciences

Professor

I. Bernard Weinstein (also Medicine) (in the Cancer Center). B.S., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., 1955

Associate Professors

Dezider Grunberger (also Biochemistry) (in the Institute of Cancer Research). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; Sc.D., 1968

Jeanne M. Stillman. B.S., City College, 1968; Ph.D., 1972

Senior Research Associate

Granville H. Sewell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; Ph.D., 1966

Assistant Professor

Alan M. Jeffrey. B.S., Hull (UK), 1966; Ph.D., University College of North Wales (UK), 1970

ASSOCIATE

Michael Gochfeld, M.D.

Epidemiology

Professors

Bruce P. Dohrenwend (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.A., 1951; Ph.D.,

Cornell, 1955 Zena A. Stein (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Cape Town, 1941; M.A., 1942; M.B.,

B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950 Mervyn W. Susser (Director, Sergievsky Center). M.B., B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South

Africa), 1950

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner. B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Adjunct Professors

Peter Greenwald. B.A., Colgate, 1957; M.D., State University of New York, 1961;

M.P.H., Harvard, 1967; Dr.P.H, 1974 Wolf Szmuness. M.D., Kharkov Medical Institute (USSR), 1 955; D.Med.Sc, Academy

of Medicine (Lublin, Poland), 1964

Associate Professors

Mary G. Curnen. M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1948; D.T.M., Antwerp (Belgium), 1949;

Dr. P.H., Columbia, 1972 David Rush (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Elmer F. Struening. B.S., Hastings, 1949; M.S., Purdue, 1951; Ph.D., 1957

118 PUBLIC HEALTH

Adjunct Associate Professors

Patricia Cohen. B.A., HamJine, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1968 Holger H. Hansen (in the Sergievsky Center). M.D., Freie Universitat (German Federal Republic), 1961; M.P.H., Columbia, 1967; Dr.P.H., 1973

Senior Research Associates

Lillian M. Belmont. B.A., Brooklyn, 1947; M.A., College of the City of New York, 1949; Ph.D., New York University, 1957; M.S., Columbia, 1970

Inge F. Goldstein. B.A., Wellesley, 1951; M.S., Pittsburgh, 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1968

Assistant Professors

Ora S. Fagan. B.A., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1961; M.S.W., California (Berkeley), 1965;

D.S.W., 1973 Nigel S. Paneth (also Pediatrics) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968;

M.D., Harvard, 1972; M.P.H., Columbia, 1978 Stephen Shafer (also Neurology) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966;

M.D., Columbia, 1970; M.P.H., 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Ann B. Goodman. B.A., Radcliffe, 1953; M.A., George Washington, 1963; M.S.,

Columbia, 1972 Paul S. May. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1951; M.S., Syracuse, 1952;

D.Sc, Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1955; M.P.H., Columbia, 1970 Judith Rabkin. B.A., Wellesley, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1967; M.P.H.,

Columbia, 1979

Health Administration

Professors

Lowell E. Bellin. B.S., Yale, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1951; M.P.H., Harvard, 1964 Lucie S. Kelly (also Nursing). B.S.N., Pittsburgh, 1947; M.Litt., 1957; Ph.D., 1965 Frank W. van Dyke (Administrative Medicine). B.A., Union (Schenectady), 1939;

M.S., Columbia, 1954 Samuel Wolfe. M.D., Toronto, 1950; M.P.H., Columbia, 1960; Dr.P.H, 1961

Adjunct Professors

Arne C. V. Barkhuus (Public Health Practice). B.A., Copenhagen, 1926; M.D., 1933;

D.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1938 Joseph V. Terenzio. B.A., Yale, 1939; J.D., Fordham, 1947; M.S., Columbia, 1954

Associate Professors

Bernard Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1961; M.P.H., Harvard, 1963 Noreen M. Clark. B.S., Utah, 1965; M.A., Columbia, 1972; Ph.D., 1976

PUBLIC HEALTH 119

Bruce Vladeck (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.A., Michigan, 1972; Ph.D., 1973

Adjunct Associate Professors

Harold Fruchtbaum (History and Philosophy of Public Health). B.C.E., New York

University, 1955; M.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1956; Ph.D., Harvard,

1964; M.A., Cambridge, 1968 Lloyd F. Novick. B.A., Colgate, 1961; M.D., New York University, 1965; M.P.H.,

Yale, 1971 Irving S. Shapiro (Public Health Education). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1938; M.S., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1954

Senior Research Associate

Regina Loewenstein (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Barnard, 1936; M.A., Columbia, 1937

Assistant Professors

Melanie C. Dreher. B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1977

Fred Goldman. B.A., Queens, 1967; M.A., Brown, 1970; Ph.D., City College, 1975

Harriet S. Goldman (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., New York University, 1962;

D.D.S., 1965; M. P. H., Columbia, 1966 Sheila A. Gorman. B.S., R.N., Niagara, 1959; M.P.H., Columbia, 1972 Marcia L. Pinkett-Heller. B.A., Howard, 1963; M.P.H., Michigan, 1970 Judith A. Richman. B.A., Rutgers, 1971; M.A., Columbia, 1974; M.Phil., 1975;

Ph.D., 1978 Stephen N. Rosenberg. B.A., Cornell, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967; M.P.H.,

Harvard, 1969 Ralph Joseph Ullman. B.A., Cornell, 1970; M.B.A., Rochester, 1972; M.S., 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Raymond S. Alexander. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.B.A., 1954; M.S., Columbia,

1956 Anita Stiles Curran. B.A., Connecticut, 1951; M.D., New York Medical College,

1955; M.P.H., Columbia, 1974 William H. Hermann. B.S., Missouri, 1951; M.S., Yale, 1953 Henry R. Karpe. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.S., Wisconsin,

1972 Nicetas H. Kuo (Public Health Practice). M.D., Philippines, 1941; M.P.H., Columbia,

1953 W. David Latham. B.S., Stanford, 1966; M.B.A., 1968 Francis C. Lindaman. B.A., Gettysburg, 1935; M. A., 1936 William L. Nute, Jr. B.A., Swarthmore, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943 Percival B. Phillips (Public Health Practice). B.A., San Francisco State, 1954; M.A.,

1956; Ed.D., Columbia, 1965 Eleanore Rothenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; M.P.A., New York University, 1969;

Ph.D., 1975 Esther A. Schisa (Public Health Practice). B.S., Syracuse, 1947; M.A., Columbia,

1955 Sheila M. Smythe. B.S., Creighton, 1952; M.S., Columbia, 1956 Boris A. Vanadzin. M.D., Munich, 1955; M.P.H., California (Berkeley), 1959

120 PUBLIC HEALTH

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Everett D. Hines, M.S. Ruth Haase, M.A.

Margaret L. Haynes, INSTRUCTORS M P H

Stephen Banks, M.A. Steven Karten, M.B.A.

Peter D. Bardax, J.D. Dulcy B. Miller, M.S.

Barbara S. Cooper, M.D. Thomas A. Sherwood, Catherine D. Crone, M.D. M.P.H.

Michael Goldfarb, M.S. Virginia K. Stowe, M.S.

Population and Family Health

Professor

Allan G. Rosenfield (also Obstetrics and Gynecology) (Director, Center for Population and Family Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Associate Professors

Giorgio R. Solimano (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D., Chile, 1960 Nicholas Cunningham (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1955; Dr. P.H., 1976 Susan G. Philliber. B.A., Florida State, 1965; M.S., 1966; Ph.D., 1968 John A. Ross (in IISHR). B.A., Ottawa, 1956; M.A., Yale, 1957; Ph.D., 1961

Adjunct Associate Professors

John Bongaarts. M.S., Eindhoven Institute of Technology, 1968; Ph.D., Illinois, 1972 Thomas Frejka. Engineer, Czechoslovak Academy oi Sciences, 1966

Senior Research Associate

Walter B. Watson. B.A., Southern Methodist, 1953; M.S., Wisconsin, 1954; Ph.D., 1959

Assistant Professors

Katherine F. Darabi. B.A., Syracuse, 1969; M.F., Columbia, 1975; M.Phil., 1977;

Ph.D., 1980 Martin E. Gorosh. B.A., Brooklyn, 1959; M.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1969; Dr.P.H,

1973 Stephen L. Isaacs. B.A., Brown, 1961; J.D., Columbia, 1965 Judith E. Jones. B.A., Hunter, 1956 Pearilla Rothenberg. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1970; M.Phil., Columbia, 1974; Ph.D.,

1976 William A. Van Wie. B.A., College of Wooster, 1961; B.D., Pittsburgh Seminary,

1964; M.P.H, North Carolina, 1968; Dr. P.H., 1974

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Joy G. Dryfoos. B.A., Antioch, 1951; M.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1966

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTOR

Henry G. Elkins, Jr., Ph.D. Marjorie A. Costa, M.P.H.

PUBLIC HEALTH 121

Sociomedical Sciences

Professors

Barbara Dohrenwend. B.A., Wellesley, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1948; Ph.D., 1954 Jack Elinson. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., George Washington, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

Associate Professors

John L. Colombotos. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.A., 1952; Ph.D., Michigan, 1961 Denise B. Kandel (in Psychiatry). B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.A., Columbia, 1953; Ph.D., 1960

Senior Research Associates

Ann F. Brunswick. B.A, Hunter, 1946; M.A., Clark, 1947

Paul W. Haberman. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1948; M.B.A., New York University, 1961 Eric Josephson. B.A., New York University, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1949; Ph.D., 1959

Assistant Professor

Sally Guttmacher. B.S., Wisconsin, 1963

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Sciences

Carol C. Schwartz. B.S., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., Yale, 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Margery M. Braren. B.A., Barnard, 1961; M.A., Columbia, 1963; Ph.D., 1971 Mitchell Schorow (Medical Education). B.A., Roosevelt, 1950; M.A., Northwestern, 1961; Ph.D., Utah, 1971

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Stanley Fisher, M.S. Corinne Kirchner, M.Phil. Athilia E. Siegmann, M.S. Anne S. Zanes, Ph.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Lambros Comitas, Ph.D.

Tropical Medicine

Professors

Michael Katz (also Pediatrics). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963 Roger W. Williams (Medical Entomology). B.S., Illinois, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D.,

Columbia, 1947

Associate Professors

Philip A. D'Alesandro (Parasitology). B.S., Rutgers, 1952; M.S., 1954; Ph.D., Chica- go, 1958

122 PUBLIC HEALTH

Dickson D. Despommier (Parasitology). B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., Colum- bia, 1964; Ph.D., Notre Dame, 1967

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ashton C. Cuckler (Parasitology). B.A., Nebraska, 1935; M.A., 1936; Ph.D., Minneso- ta, 1941 John D. Frame. B.A, Wheaton, 1938; M.D., Northwestern, 1943

Assistant Professor

Suzanne Holmes (Parasitology). B.A., New York University/, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974

INSTRUCTORS

Martin G. Blechman, M.D.

Chung C. Wang, M.D.

Faculty Members Not Affiliated with Specific Divisions

Professor

Sami A. Hashim (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Beirut, 1950; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Adjunct Professor

Myron Brin (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Cornell, 1947; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1951

Assistant Professor of Anthropology

Robert J. Wasserstrom. B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.A., 1973; Ph.D., 1977

Assistant Professor of Nursing

Lois Arlene Grau. B.S.N. , Marquette, 1968; M.S., Wisconsin, 1976; Ph.D., 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Paul N . Borsky . B.A., Brooklyn, 1 942

Nicholas Herskovits. B.B.A., Bernard Baruch School of Business and Public Adminis- tration, 1963

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Nursing

Nancy Graham. B.S., Columbia, 1956; M.A., New York University, 1960; M.P.H., Columbia, 1972; Dr.P.H, 1976

Lecturers in All Divisions

PUBLIC HEALTH RADIOLOGY 123

Kenneth F. Adamec, M.S. George H. Adams, M.S. Frederick D. Alley, M.D. Brenda Breuer, Ph.D. Peter Baglio, Sc.M. Gary B. Beringer, D.P.H. Richard A. Berman,

M.B.A., M.H.A. Marcia J. Cleveland, J.D. Roy Brown, M.A. Martin Cherkasky, M.D. Irene J. Clark, M.P.H. Alvin J. Conway, M.S. Jean B. Cropper, M.P.H. Daniel L. Drosness,

M.P.H. Gary, M. Eidsvold, M.D. Rinaldo A. Ferrer, M.D. Andrew C. Fleck, M.D. Thomas J. Foley, M.S. Stephen L. Forstenser,

M.S. Richard C. Friedman,

M.D. Bernard Fuss, M.S.

Robert Galton, Ph.D. Gary Gambuti George Goldberg, M.B.A. Judith D. Goldberg, Sc.D. Edward V. Grant Margaret T. Grossi, M.D. David Harris, M.D. Frank W. Hays, M.B.A. Robert E. Heinlein, M.S. Donald W. Helbig, M.D. E. Geoffrey High, M.S. Florence Kavaler, M.D. Howard R. Kelman,

Ph.D. John T. Kolody, M.S. Bruce G. Link Lawrence E. McDevitt,

B.A. Mary C. McLaughlin, M.D. Robert Markowitz, M.S. John S. Marr, M.P.H. Charles H. Meyer, M.S. Elaine S. Millner, Ph.D. Anthony C. Mustalish,

M.D.

Karl E. Nelson, M.S. Margaret J. O'Brien,

M.P.H. Donna O'Hare, M.D. Jaime OUe, M.D. Jean Pakter, M.D. Dhun B. Patel, Ph.D. Clarence E. Pearson, M.S. Richard H. Perry, M.S. Olive E. Pitkin, M.D. Peter Rogatz, M.D. Alan H. Rosenblut, M.B.A. Hana Rostain, M.D. Harvey Schoenfeld, M.S. Joseph Sherber, M.S. Elliot J. Simon, M.S. Thomas J. G. Tighe, Jr.,

M.P.H. Andre A. O. Varma, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Beatrice Mintz, M.D. Samuel M. Wishik, M.D.

Radiology

Professor and Chairman

William B. Seaman. M.D. , Harvard, 1941

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

David H. Baker. M.D., Boston, 1951

Walter E. Berdon. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., 1955

Chu Huai Chang. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai), 1944

Zang-Hee Cho (Physics). B.S.. Seoul National (Korea), 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D.,

Upsala, 1966 Kent Ellis. M.D. , Yale, 1950

Eric J. Hall (Physics). D. Phil., Oxford, 1962; D. Sc, 1978 Sadek Hilal. M.D., Cairo, 1955 Harald H. Rossi (Physics). Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942

Professors of Clinical Radiology

William J. Casarella. B.A., Yale, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1963 Frieda Feldman. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., 1957 Donald L. King. B.A., Stanford, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Ralph Schlaeger. B.S., Wisconsin, 1942; M.D., 1945

124 RADIOLOGY

Adjunct Professors

Victor P. Bond. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1943; M.D., California (San Francisco),

1945; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1952 Simon Larach. Ph.D., Princeton, 1955

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borek (also Radiology). B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weizman Institute (Israel), 1967

Associate Professors of Clinical Radiology

Thane Asch. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

John H. Austin. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Yale, 1965

Rashid Fawwaz. M.D., American (Beirut), 1960; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1968

Patricia Tretter. B.A., Marquette, 1944; M.D., 1949

Adjunct Associate Professor

Lawrence A. Shepp. B.S., Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, 1958; M.A., Princeton, 1960; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Kevin L. Macken. M.D., National (Ireland), 1947 Eric C. Martin. M.D., St. Thomas (London), 1967 Paul Sane. M.D., Bucharest, 1950

Assistant Professors

Charles R. Geard. Ph.D., Australian National University, 1973 Andrew Arthur Maudsley. B.S.C, Nottingham, 1973; Ph.D., 1976 Richard C. Miller. B.A., Iowa, 1969; M.S., 1972; Ph.D., Iowa, 1976

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Harry Agress, Jr. B.A., Tufts, 1968; M.D., 1972

Benjamin Bashist. B.S., Brooklyn, 1972; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1975

Nicholas M. Dzebolo. B.S., Union (Schnectady), 1969; M.D., Hahnemann, 1973

Peter D. Esser (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Brown, 1961; M.S., Adelphi, 1964;

Ph.D., 1971 Elliott Fanchuken. B.A., New York University, 1974; M.D., State University of New

York (Buffalo), 1975 Sundara R . Ganti . M. B. B. S. , Guntur Medical College (India), 1 96 7; M.D., 1967 Richard P. Gold. B.A., Tufts, 1965; M.D., 1969 David V. Habif, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974 Karen B. Karlson. B.S., City College, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975 Nikitas D. Kessaris (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Emory, 1952; M.S., Harvard, 1953;

Ph.D., 1966 Arthur Liskow. B.S., Cincinnati, 1963; M.D., 1967

Louis E. Schwartz. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1974 David W. Seldin. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968; M.S., Colorado,

1970; M.D., New York University, 1975 Alan J. Silver. B.A., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Rochester, 1973 Fred C. Van Natta. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1964; M.D., 1968

RADIOLOGY 125

Theodore Sheng-Tao Wang. Ph.D., Maryland, 1964

Margaret A. Whelan. B.S., St. John's, 1968; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1972

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S. Miami (Florida), 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Bruce J. Biavati (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.A., 1955; Ph.D., 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

David A. Follett. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1954

Shelby J. Galloway. B.A., Catawba College, 1961; M.D., Bowman-Gray, 1965

William M. Griffin. B.S., Notre Dame, 1958; M.D., State University of New

York (Upstate), 1962 Harvey L. Hecht. B.A., Amherst, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Steven D. Richman. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971 Robert Silbey. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Marion H. Biavati, Ph.D. Richard P. Bird, Ph.D.. Daniel S. J. Choy Michael L. Freeman, Ph.D. Paul Furcinetti, Ph.D. Paul Goldhagen, Ph.D. Paul J. Kliauga, Ph.D.

(Radiation Biophysics) Peter M.S. Wai Marco Zaider, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY

Barbara Binkert Gregory M. Carsen, M.D. Edward L. Hedlund William H. Perman Louis E. Rambler, M.D. Robert W. Schultz

STAFF ASSOCIATES Rudolph Gand Herbert Jacobs, B.E.E.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Harry Rodney Hartman.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY

Robert D. Henretig, M.D. Jeffrey A. Levy Katherine Lloyd Peter T. Wright

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Theodore R. Stent. B.A., Talladega, 1944; M.D., Meharry, 1948

126 RADIOLOGY

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Jeanne Armstrong. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Christopher A. Johnson. B.A., Howard, 1943; M.D., 1947

Koon Sup Lee. M.D., Catholic Medical College (Seoul), 1967

Laurencia B. Regalado. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1957

Headley Scott. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1941; M.D., Howard, 1944

Assistant Clinical Professors

Yuthana Samroengraja. M.D., Chulalongkorn Hospital Medical School, 1965 Abdulhamid R. Vazir. M.D., Bombay, 1942

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY Chomyong K. Charoenkul, M.D. Gilles M. Hendrick, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors of Clinical Radiology

Nathaniel Finby. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1938; M.D., 1942

Richard D. Kittridge. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954

Clinical Professors

Kuo-York Chynn. B.S., National Tung-Chi (Shanghai), 1945; M.D., 1949; M.S., St.

Louis, 1954 Virginia Kanick. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

John T. Hsu. M.D., National Defense (Taiwan), 1957

Leonard M. Liegner. B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944

Efthimios C. Spyropoulos. M.D., Athens, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Jeanne W. Baer. B.S., Connecticut, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

Carol L. Hilfer. B.A., Barnard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971

William I. Shaw. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1962

Alvaro Vallejo. M.D., Del Valle (Colombia), 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Ina A. Altman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1956; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylva- nia, 1960 Frank M. Dain. B.A., Dartmouth, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1945 David S. Marsden. Ph.D., Jefferson, 1968

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Manoochehr Abiri, M.D. Allan B. Rubin, M.D.

Cynthia Lee David, M.D. Theodora Serban, M.D.

Pierre-Alix Haspil, M.D. Peter K. Yeung, M.D. Robert A. Phillips, M.D.

Hi-Jung Pyun, M.D. STAFF associate

Sabino J. Rizzo, M.D. Morris Hodara, M.S. Kenneth T. Rogers

REHABILITATION MEDICINE 127

Rehabilitation Medicine

Simon Baruch Professor and Chairman

John A. Downey. M.D., Manitoba, 1954; D.Phil., Christ Church (Oxford), 1962; F.R.C.P.

At Presbyterian Hospital

Associate Professor

Lucien J. Cote (also Neurology). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954

Associate Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Erwin G. Gonzalez. B.A., Santo Tomas (Manila), 1962; M.D., 1967 Stanley J. Myers. B.A., New York University, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961

Senior Research Associate

Leon T. Kremzner. Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955

Assistant Professor

Larry J. Crawshaw (also Pharmacology). B.A., California, 1964; Ph.D., 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Jonathan R. Moldover. B.A., Trinity (Connecticut), 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

Antonio Cocchiarella. M.D., Bari (Italy), 1953

Francis J. Foca. B.S., Fordham, 1957; M.D., Bologna (Italy), 1966

Carolina O. McCagg. B.A., Barnard, 1962; M.D., Yale, 1966

Damyanti G. Moorjani (also Pediatrics). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant (Bombay),

1957 Naomi L. Turner. B.A., San Francisco Xavier (Bolivia), 1948; M.D., 1956

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL STAFF ASSOCIATE

REHABILITATION MEDICINE REHABILITATION MEDICINE Abigail R Evans B A

Alfred Hess, D.O. Vivenne Katz, M.S. M.D.

Keith C. Keeler, M.D. Anthony V. Porcelli, M.D.

(at Morristown Patricia A. Richards, M.D.

Memorial Hospital) (at Blythedale

Jay S. Mendelsohn, M.D. Children's Hospital)

Robert Stone, M.S.

(at Blythedale

Children's Hospital)

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Albert D. Anderson (A. David Gurewitsch Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Harvard, 1952

128 REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Associate Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Herbert L. Thornhill. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1951; M.D., Howard, 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Yasoma B. Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1963

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning (in Pediatrics). B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1 949

Assistant Clinical Professor

Wanda Brodzka. M.D., Academy of Medicine (Warsaw), 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION

MEDICINE MEDICINE

Cecilia Macauley, M.A. Ivan T. Donev, M.D.

Harriett Minor, M.A.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION Huminado C. Nebab, M.D

MEDICINE

Louise Weiss, M.A.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Arun Kuman Bhattacharyyan. Intermediate Sci., Bangabasi (Calcutta), 1950; M.D.,

Nilratan Sirca Medical College (Calcutta), 1955 Sally Wisely. B.A., Radcliffe, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1967

Assistant Clinical Professor

Rodolfo L. Reyes. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1952

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE Wen-Ling L. Fan, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lucille T. Pai. M.D., Woman's Christian Medical College (Shanghai), 1941

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Ravi Raj Malpe, M.B., B.S.

Occupational Therapy

Professor

Marie Louise Franciscus (director of program). O.T.R., Philadelphia School of Occu- pational Therapy, 1937; B.S., Ohio State, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1956

REHABILITATION MEDICINE SURGERY 129

Assistant Professor

Barbara Neuhaus (acting director of program). 1952; M.A., 1960; Ed.D., 1980

B.A., Keuka, 1950; O.T.R., Columbia,

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Margaret Ann Brown, M.A. Adele Germain, M.S. Nedra P. Gillette, M.Ed. Schone Pang Diane Shapiro, M.A. Eleanor V. Shelly, B.S. Gordon G. Williamson, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Cheryl Colangelo, M.S. Alice Feinberg, M.S. Roberta Roth, M.S.W.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Janet Falk-Kessler, M.A. Laurelee Hawkins, B.S. Frances Brandivein

Kraver, B. S. Patricia A. Miller, M.A.

Physical Therapy

Associate Professors

Ruth Dickinson (acting director of program). B.S., Russell Sage, 1944; M.A., Colum- bia, 1947

Althea M. Jones. B.S., Panzer College of Physical Education, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1972

Assistant Professors

Bernadette Hecox. Thomas J. Schmitz. 1974

B.S., Columbia, 1968; M.A., 1973 B.S., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1972; M.S., Boston,

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Theodore Corbitt, M.A. Patricia Sullivan, M.A.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Adrienne F. Bergen, B.A. Margaret Beyda, B.S. Barbara Hanley, M.S. Joseph A. Malloy, B.S.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Marion Marx, M.A. B.S. Georgia Reidel, B.S. Kathy A. Sack, B.S. Diane Zuck, B.A.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Ann B. Edgar, B.S. Pamela Harris, B.S.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

James Kruse, M.S. Lindi Oberon, B.S. Ann L. Ovellette, B.A. Paul Ribera, M.A. Joan Smith, B.S. Patricia Storjohann, M.A. Joan E. Thomas, B.S. Karen Tobman, M.A. Diane L. Waithe, M.A.

Surgery

Valentine Mott Professor and Johnson & Johnson Distinguished Professor and Chairman

Keith Reemtsma. B.S., Idaho State, 1945; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

R. Peter Altman. B.A., Colgate, 1955; M.S., Rochester, 1958; M.D., New York

Medical College, 1961 Frank Gump. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., New York University, 1955

130 SURGERY

David V. Habif (Morris and Rose Milstein Professor). B.S., Columbia, 1936; M.D.,

1939 Mark A. Hardy. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Frederic P. Herter (Hugh Auchincloss Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., 1944 Robert B. Hiatt. B.S., Wilmington, 1938; M.D., Cincinnati, 1942 Thomas C. King. B.A., Utah, 1950; M.D., 1954; M.A., Missouri, 1963 John M. Kinney. B.A., Denison, 1943; M.D., Harvard, 1946 Thomas J. Krizek. B.S., Marquette, 1954; M.D., 1957; M.A., Yale, 1974 John B. Price, Jr. M.A., Texas, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1950

Professors of Clinical Surgery

Harold G. Barker. B.A., Utah, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1943

Frederick O. Bowman, Jr. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1952

Avram M. Cooperman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1960; M.D., Howard, 1965

Bard Cosman. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

James R. Malm. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Alfred M. Markowitz. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1952 Arthur B. Voorhees, Jr. B.A., Virginia, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Associate Professors

David Bregman. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1965 Paul Lo Gerfo. B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1961; M.S., 1963; M.D., State

University of New York (Upstate), 1967 Henry M. Spotnitz. B.A., Harvard, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Associate Professor of Pathology

Nicole Suciu-Foca. B.S., Bucharest (Rumania), 1954; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgery

Joseph A. Buda. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

Carl R. Feind. B.A., Texas, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Kenneth Forde. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Alfred Jaretzki III. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D.,1944

Frederick R. Randall. B.S., Howard, 1942; M.D., 1945

Francis C. Symonds, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Bashir Ahmad Zikria. B.S., George Washington, 1954; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1958

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert G. Bertsch. B.A., Carleton, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957

Charles W. Findlay. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

David M. Ju. M.D., National Medical College (Shanghai), 1944; Med.Sc.D., Columbia,

1954 Sven Kister. B.A., Dartmouth, 1955; M.D., Harvard, 1958 John N. Schullinger. B.A., Princeton, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 Philip D. Wiedel. B.S., Cannes (France), 1934; B.A., Columbia, 1938; M.D., 1941

Senior Research Associate

William H. Dobelle. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1964; Ph.D., Utah, 1974

SURGERY 131

Senior Research Associate of Biochemistry

David Elwyn. B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

Mary H. McGrath. B.A., New Rochelle, 1966; M.D., St. Louis, 1970 Roman Nowygrod. B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Collin J. Weber. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Irving Goodman. B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., 1944

Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery

Ivo p. Janecka. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Paul H. Gerst. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952

Leif O. Holgersen. B.A., Taylor, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1965

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Malayappa Jeevanandam, Ph.D. Duncan L. McCoUester, Ph.D. Shanta M. Modak, M.D., Ph.D. Ben T. Sandler, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY Vincent W. Ansanelli, M.D. Robert G. Blabey, M.D. Harold M. Bruck, M.D. Sherman M. Bull, M.D. Leslie Mark Kutscher, M.D. Mark David Sherman, M.D. Charles A. Slanetz, M.D. George J. Todd, M.D. James S. Todd, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Jerome Martin Dubroff George B. Haasler Hiroshi Hasheguchi, M.D. German Lipovetsky Rita Lipton, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Narihito Kuromoto Esther Meyer, M.A. Kazunari Satake Tadahiro Taguchi Yoshi Takeda

SPECIAL LECTURERS William A. Gardner, M.D. Raffaele Lattes, M.D.

LECTURERS

Shivaji B. Bhonslay, M.D.

George Escher, M.D.

WRITER-INRESIDENCE Harry Schwartz, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgery

David A. Blumenstock. B.A., Union (Schenectady), 1949; M.D., Cornell, 1953

132 SURGERY

Associate Clinical Professors

Rodman D. Carter (in Urology). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 John E. Olson. B.A., Kansas, 1953; M.D., 1956

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

James Bordley IV. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Patrick Allen Dietz. B.A., Holy Cross, 1966; B.M. Sci., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D.,

Harvard, 1970 Roger W. MacMillan III. B.S., Trinity, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Edward J. Carey, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958

Webster J. Stayman. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1966; M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1970

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Surgery

Harold P. Freeman. B.A., Catholic, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1958

Associate Clinical Professors

David M. Carberry. Ph.D., Providence, 1947; M.D., Jefferson, 1951

Robert F. Morton. M.D., Meharry, 1944

John W. Parker, Jr. B.A., Fisk, 1942; M.D., Meharry, 1945

Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology

Lee David Eisenberg. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

Barbara Barlow. B.A., New York University, 1946; D.D.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D.,

1953 Ganepola A. Ganepola. B.S., Kyoto, 1966; M.D., 1967 Mohamad H. Parsa. B.S., Tehran, 1957; M.D., 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

Salvatore G. Cinque. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.D., Loyola,

1946 James E. C. Norris. B.A., Hampton Institute, 1953; M.D., Case Western Reserve,

1957 Ruben Oropeza. B.S., Mexico, 1948; M.D., 1955 Carlton E. Patrick. M.D., University of the Saar (Hamburg, Germany), 1957

Assistant Clinical Professor of Neurological Surgery

Robert W. Schick. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

SURGERY 133

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL SURGERY Matthew D. Branche, M.D. Rajinder Gandhi, M.D. Urbano K. Guarin, M.D. Malcolm Moley, M.D. Pierre G. Van Bockstaele, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Egel Francois, M.D. Edoardo Giuliani, M.D. Robert W. Holtzman, M.D. Avtar S. Josen, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

William L. King, M.D. Barnett Miller, M.D. John R. Nailor, M.D. Gurmukh S. Walha, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL NEUROSURGERY

George V. DiGiocinto, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROSURGERY

Roger Antoine, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Richard W. Brenner. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

David Befeler. Robert Specht.

B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., 1959 B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1946

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Bruce J. Brener, M.D. John H. Cooper, M.D. Douglas M. Costabile, M.D. John Joseph Hudock, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued)

Frank F. Kaiser, M.D. Robert E. Knapp, M.D. Daniel L. Moore, M.D. Saverio J. Panzarino, M.D. Morton Perkoff, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued) Jerome Spivack, M.D. John V. Triolo, M.D. E. Bruce Whitesell, M.D. Charles J. Wittmann, Jr. M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors of Clinical Surgery

J. William Littler. B.S., Duke, 1938; M.D., 1942

Richard B. Stark. B.A., Stanford, 1936; M.D., Cornell, 1941

Walter Wichern. B.S., Mount Union, 1942; M.D., Harvard, 1945

Clinical Professor

W. Graham Knox. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1942

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard G. Eaton. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1951; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1955

Joseph Ford. B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

George E. Green. B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D., 1956

Charles C. Harrold, Jr. B.S., Georgia, 1937; M.D., Harvard, 1941

John E. Hutchinson. B.S., Morehouse, 1953; M.D., Meharry, 1957

Robert E. McCabe. B.A., Williams, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Howard R. Nay. B.A., Virginia Military Institute, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

James B. Rodgers. B.A., Virginia, 1944; M.D., 1948

Edward G. Stanley-Brown. M.D. , Pennsylvania, 1948

134 SURGERY UROLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professors

Peter A. Bossart. B.A., Muhlenberg, 1947; M.D., Cornell, 1951

Thomas Dailey. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Cornell, 1961

Robert T. Edmonds. B.A., Harvard, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Paul D. Harris. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Conrad G. Lattes. B.S., Swarthmore, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1963

James A. MacDonald. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Haroutane A. Mekhjian. B.S., American (Beirut), 1961; M.D., 1965

Robert E. Miller. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1957 Robert J. Mulcare. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961 Carl S. Oakman. B.A., Harvard, 1938; M.D., Tufts, 1943 James H. Terry, Jr. B.S., Arizona, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Chin Bor Yeoh. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Arnold Belgraier

Gregory W. Brabbee, M.D.

Peter B. Cinelli, M.D.

John F. Crowe, M.D.

Clayton R. De Haan, M.D.

Clarence A. Dunn, Jr., M.D.

Peter B. Fodor, M.D.

Philip E. Gordon, M.D.

James F. Grillo

Joshua M. Kaplan, M.D.

John J. Keyser, M.D.

Farid J. Khoury, M.D.

Danne R. Lorieo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY

(continued)

Stephan G. Lynn, M.D. Richard A. Marks, M.D. Antoinc S. Munther, M.D. William G. Ramey, M.D. Walter H. Stingle, M.D. Paul I. Tomljanovich, M.D. Hiroshi Washio, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Mikio Kamiyama, Ph.D.

Urology

Professor and Chairman

Carl A. Olsson. B.A., Bowdoin, 1959; M.D., Boston, 1963

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor of Clinical Urology

Ralph J. Veenema. B.A., Calvin, 1952; M.D., Jefferson, 1945

Associate Professor

Ralph De Vere White. B.Ch., BAO., University College (Dublin), 1964; M.D., 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Myron Tannenbaum. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D., 1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Urology

Peter J. Puchner. B.A., Carleton, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Nicholas A. Romas. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

UROLOGY 135

Associate Clinical Professors

Stanley B. Braham. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947 Frank W. Longo. B.S., Maryland, 1951; M.D., 1955

Myron S. Roberts. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1954

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Philip Tomashefsky. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistant Professors of Clinical Urology

John D. Birkoff. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Terry W. Hensle. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1964; M.D., Cornell, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professors

Elliot L. Cohen. B.A., New York University, 1963; M.D., Chicago, 1967

Peter N. De Sanctis. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1962

J. Timothy Donovan. M.D., New York Medical College, 1948

Louis J. Dougherty. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

John P. Grant. B.A., Amherst, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Michael H. Wechsler. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1961; M.D., St. Louis, 1965

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL UROLOGY INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Leonard J. Rudin Richard Kroll, M.D.

Charles E. Umhey, Jr., M.D. James Umhey, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery

Rodman D. Carter. B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY Bruce MacDonald, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert R. White. B.A., Amherst, 1949; M.D., Rochester, 1954

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL UROLOGY ASSOCIATES {continued)

Kenneth L. Day, M.D. Joseph S. Ritter, M.D.

Pascal A. Pironti, M.D. Morey Wosnitzer, M.D.

At St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Russell W. Lavengood, Jr. B.A., St. Joseph's (Indiana), 1947; M.D., Louisville, 1951

136 UROLOGY

Associate Clinical Professors

Manuel Fernandez. M.D., Coimbra (Portugal), 1956

Perrin B. Snyder. B.S., New York University, 1929; M.D., 1933

Joseph N. Ward. M.B., B.Ch., University College (Dublin), 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

William J. Nelson. B.A., Williams, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1946 Robert D. Wickham. B.A., Drew, 1947; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

UROLOGY

Arumbi P. Subramaniam,

M.D. Pellegrino J. Tozzo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Philip C. Cea, M.D. Harry S. David, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Alfred F. Fretz, M.D. Waleed G. Maloof, M.D. Constantine Photos, M.D. Joseph D. Putignano,

M.D. Alexander Sotiropoulos,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued) Rudolph D. Talarico, M.D. James W. Vastola, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Abas Rezvani, M.D. Damir Velcek, M.D.

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1980

Ahlborn, Thomas N. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Aisen, Mindy L. Mount Sinai Hospital of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio. Flexible Allan, Anne E. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Medicine Anderson, Nancy A. Children's Center, University Hospital, Seattle, Washington.

Pediatrics Anthony, Kent E. University of Alabama Medical Center, Birmingham, Alabama.

Family Practice Apfelbaum, Terri F. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Appel, Rena. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Bello, Jacqueline A. Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, New

York. Flexible Beriieley, Hope A. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Bernstein, Carol A. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Bernstein, Wendy J. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Bluh, Donald C. New Rochelle Hospital, New Rochelle, New York. Medicine Blumeni<ehl, Mark L. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, New York. Medicine Boakye-Adjei, Oheneba. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Bogen, Craig. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Medicine Bransford, Kent J. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Medicine Brudney, Karen F. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Cartelli, Nancy A. Case Western Reserve University Hospitals, Cleveland,

Ohio. Pediatrics Casper, Theodore. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Chow, John H. S. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Pathology Cohen, David E. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michi- gan. Medicine Cuadros, Cesar L. University of California San Diego Affiliated Hospitals, San Diego,

California. Surgery Czaja, Mark J. University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio. Medicine Davey, Richard T. University Hospitals, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine DeAngelis, Lisa M. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Deland, Jonathan T. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Delaney, Kathleen A. New York University Bellevue Hospital, New York, New

York. Medicine Dennison, Allen M. Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island. Medicine Dennison, Jane M. Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island. Pediatrics Dillon, Peter W. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Dolinsky, Paul A. Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island. Medicine Downey, Richard S. Washington University Affiliated Hospitals, St. Louis, Missouri.

Surgery Dubin, Leslie B. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Dwosh, Jack. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Surgery Ecker, Hendrik M. Hospitals of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. Medicine Engler, Alan M. Monte f lore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Surgery Engler, Danielle E. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Epstein, Joel. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Fakharzadeh, Frederick F. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery

138 FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1980

Farrell, Matthew M. The Somerset Hospital, Somerville, New Jersey. Family Prac- tice Fehrs, Laura J. University of California Hospitals, Los Angeles, California. Pediat- rics Feiman, Nancy B. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Feller, Matthew F. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Fisher, William A. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Fithian, Eileen M. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Fox, Joyce E. Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. Pediatrics Fox, Susan C. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Friedmann, Martin L. Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. Medicine Gardine, Robert L. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Gelfand, Janice M. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Geller, Peter L. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Genkins, Steven M. University of California Hospitals, San Francisco, Califor- nia. Medicine Geraci, Kira A. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Goland, Robin S. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Goodrich, James T. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Graney, John F. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Griffin, Patrick H. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Grundfest, Warren S. University of California Hospitals, Los Angeles, Califor- nia. Surgery Hamm, Peter G. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Handlin, Davis S. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Handwerger, Sandra D. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Hardy, Howard W. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Herbert, Robert A. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Medicine Hollenberg, James P. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Hotes, Richard E. The Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut. Flexible Howell, John T. Hunterdon Medical Center, Flemington, New Jersey. Family

Practice Illowsky, Barbara P. Washington Hospital Center, Washington, D.C. Medicine Kawata, Carol L. Los Angeles County-Harbor General Hospital, Torrance, Califor- nia. Pediatrics Kiest, Curtis A. University of California Hospitals, San Francisco, California. Ortho- paedic Surgery Kumaki, David J. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Langendorf, Frederick. New York University Medical Center, New York, New

York. Medicine LaPook, Jonathan P. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Larach, David R. Hospital of University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Anesthesiology LaSala, Patrick A. Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Lauderdale, Bradley. Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, New

York. Medicine Lee, Dennis E. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Leff, Steven R. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Legant, Paul M. North Carolina Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Or- thopaedic Surgery Levin, Daniel H. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Lewis, Barbara. Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, New York. Medi- cine Lipkin, Alan F. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Surgery Lipschitz, Sherman. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Pathology.

FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1980 139

Lurio, Joseph G. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Family Practice Lyle, Henry R. University of California (Davis) Affiliated, Davis, California. Medi- cine McCann, Peter D. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery McCluskey, Leo F. University of Michigan Affiliated, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Medi- cine McKinley, George F. St. Luke's Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Macchi, Paul. Mount Zion Hospital, San Francisco, California. Radiology Malin, Barnet D. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Medicine Mandelbaum, David E. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecti- cut. Pediatrics Manelis, Jocelyn B. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Manevitz, Alan Z. A. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Maxwell, Celia. Howard University Hospital, Washington, D.C Medicine Mazzeo, Vincent P. Hospital of University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Radiology Minikes, Neil I. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Moley, Jeffrey F. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Sur- gery Morris, Valery L. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Pediatrics Murphy-Chutorian, Douglas R. New York University -Bellevue Hospital, New York,

New York. Medicine Navia, Bradford A. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Newman, Bernard P. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecti- cut. Surgery Nunez, Domingo C. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery O'Connell, Genevieve C. Waterbury Hospital, Waterbury, Connecticut. Medicine O'Laughlin, Martin P. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Pediatrics Oliver, Dennis C. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Orentreich, David S. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Pankewycz, Oleh G. University of Chicago Clinics, Chicago, Illinois. Medicine Paradis, Marc A. Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D.C. Medicine Parnes, Anita L. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Paul, Matthew D. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Pfeffer, Sondra J. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Medicine Quevedo, Jonathan P. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Flexible Radin, Arthur I. University of California Hospitals, Los Angeles, California. Medi- cine Ressa, Ames D. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Roman, Mary J. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Romano, Angela A. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Rosenfeld, Suzanne. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Rund, Deborah G. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Saber, William L. University of Colorado Affiliated, Denver, Colorado. Surgery Sahar, David I. Ohio State University Hospitals, Columbus, Ohio. Medicine Sakwa, Marc P. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Schiz, Steven L. Hospitals of University Health Center of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,

Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Schlam, Julia F. Boston Hospital for Women, Boston, Massachusetts. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Schloss, Stephen B. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Sur- gery Schubert, Armin. National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland. Medicine Scott, Wendell C. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Serdarevic, Olivia N. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics

140 FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS; CLASS OF 1980

Sessler, Daniel I. University of California Hospitals, Los Angeles, California. Pediat- rics Shapiro, Peter A. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Sharanevych, Irene S. New York University -Veteran's Administration Hospital, New

York, New York. Medicine Softness, Barney. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Solomon, Meryl L. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, New York. Family Prac- tice Starker, Paul M. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Steinberg, Robin F. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Sullivan, Mary Anna. McLean Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Psychiatry Swiderski, Daborah M. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Teichman, Sam L. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Thomas, Natalia E. Children's Hospital, Washington, D.C. Pediatrics Ultmann, Monica H. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Waltner, Nancy M. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Weinstock, Ruth S. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Wescoe, Sybil. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics West, Sally A. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine Wiznia, Andrew A. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Yellin, Tova. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Zeidel, Mark L. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Zwas, Felice R. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine

Student Roster: Class of 1981

Adams, Roberta Harris. Bronxville, N.Y. B.S., Antioch, 1977

Aiken, Brenda. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Aldea, Gabriel-Sorin. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Altshuler, Steven Lane. Englewood, N.J. B.A., Rochester, 1977

Amador, Jorge Luis. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1975

Apfelbaum, Mark. New York, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Appleton, Abraham T. Englewood, N.J. B.A., Yeshiva, 1976

Aranow, Robert Bittman Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Arildsen, Ronald Curtis Endicott, N.Y. B.S., M.S., Yale, 1977

Auletta, Maria Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.S., St. Francis, 1977

Ausubel, Kalman Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Bauman, Phillip Allen Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1976

Beane, Susan Jo Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Beitz, Julie Germaine Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Blackwood, Roland Alexander New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Booth, Richard Linn Cambridge, Ohio B.A., Princeton, 1977

Broom, Michael Joseph Sudbury, Mass. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Butler, Annette Louise Laurelton, N.Y. B.S., Queens, 1977

Byrne, Jeffrey Michael Sherborn, Mass. B.S., Massachusetts, 1977

Cagliostro, Stephen Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Capaldo, Maria Elena New York, N.Y. B.S., Hunter, 1970

Carson, JoAnn Monroe, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977

Castiglione, Charles L. Hamden, Conn. B.A., Yale, 1977

Chandra, Elizabeth Stuart New York, N.Y. B.A., Goucher, 1972

Clinton, Henry Louis New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Cohen, Paul Jay Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Cohen, Ron New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

CoUymore, Victor Alvin Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1981 141

Colon-Linares, Juan Ponce, Puerto Rico Iowa

Cotto, Sonla Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Cutillo, Robert Paul Montclair, N.J. B.S., Georgetown, 1977

Degreef, Gustav Lido Beach, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1976

Deluty, Sheldon Howard Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Dhungel, Rajiv Upadhyay Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. Dover (England)

Diao, Edward Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Diaz, Angela New York, N.Y. City College, 1976

Dick, Alison B. Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1977

Drucker, Elizabeth Anne San Mateo, Calif. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Ehrlich, Carol Margaret New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Elliott, Deirdre Davina New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1977

Feit, David Louis Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1977

Feld, Randy Jay Massapequa Park, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977

Flatow, Evan Lloyd New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Freedman, Susan Dee Palo Alto, Calif. B.A., Yale, 1975

Freyberg, Christopher Wm. Pleasantville, N.Y. B.S., Wisconsin, 1977

Gendler, Ellen Caryn Bellmore, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1977

Gertler, Jonathan Paul New York, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1977

Glantz, Sanford David Rosedale, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1977

Goldberg, David Michael Stamford, Conn. B.A., Yale, 1974

Goldstein, Nannette Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1973

Golub, Robert Matthew Newburgh, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Gravallese, Ellen M. Andover, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Grossl, Eugene Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Grunberg, Eva Lillian Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1977

Hayes, Dewleen Gay Atherton, Calif. B.A., Stanford, 1968

Holubowitch, Edward J. Warwick, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Hresko, Michael Timothy Flint, Mich. B. A., Harvard, 1976

Katzman, Michael Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Keefe, Bernadette Chestertown, Md. B.A., St. John's, 1976

Kellman, Howard David Monongahela, Pa. B.A., Stanford, 1974

Kirby, Mathis Ann Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1977

Kleiman, Neal Stephen Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Kutscher, Martin Lyle Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Kwon, Peter Heejoon, Jr. Los Angeles, Calif. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of

Technology, 1977 Landaw, Irene Sarah Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Purchase), 1976 Landy, Harold Stephen New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1972 Lanzara, Barbara Lynne New York, N.Y. B.S., State University of New York

(Albany), 1974 Le, Xuan Ha Thi Clarence, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1977 Lee, Timothy Leslie Sacramento, Calif. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1977 Lehmann, Harold Philip New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977 Lent, Kenneth David Kenmore, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1977 Levin, Marc Stephen New Rochelle, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of

Technology, 1977 Levine, Alice Carla New York, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Albany), 1973 Lipman, Steve Paul Huntington, N.Y. B. A., Amherst, 1977 Louard, Rita Jean Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1976 Lubka, Rhonda Hartford, Conn. B. A., Barnard, 1977 Ludwig, Robert Lewis Merrick, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977 Markowitz, Steven B. Baltimore, Md. B.A., Yale, 1975 Marshall, Mitchell H. New York, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1974 Maun, Steve Joseph Miro, Claudio Lazaro West Orange, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1977

142 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1981

Moss, Barbara Ann Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1967

Moy, Larry Bronx, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1977

Muraszko, Karin Marie New Providence, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1977

Murphy, Stephen Gerard North Attleboro, Mass. B.S., Columbia, 1977

Muschel, Michael J. Monsey, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Nercessian, Ohannes A. Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Lehman, 1977

Nerenstone, Stacy Ruth Iowa City, Iowa B.A., Brown, 1977

Oppedisano, Carlyn Ann Roslyn Heights, N.Y. B.A., Adelphi, 1977

Orland, Steven M. Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Ozick, Lisa A. Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., City College (New York), 1977

Palazzolo, Michael John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Park, William II

Patsos, Theodore John Canton, Mass. B.A., Brown, 1977

Pellicone, John Thomas Clinton, Conn. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Peress, Richard Eliot Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1977

Perofsky, Howard Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.A., City College, 1977

Petchler, Janet Caroline Hamden, Conn. B.A., Vassar, 1976

Raby, Khether Emile Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1977

Regan, Raymond Francis Edgewater, N.J. B. A., Rutgers, 1977

Richmond, Kenneth Herbert Providence, R.I. B.A., Brown, 1971

Rifkin, Terry Paul Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1977

Roberts, James Michael Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977

Rogers, David Michael East Rockaway, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Rosenfield, Howard T. Newton Center, Mass. B.A., Brandeis, 1968

Rosenthal, Robert Bruce West Hartford, Conn. B.S., Yale, 1976

Ross, Richard Steven Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Rozmaryn, Leo Martin Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1977

Rudolph, Michael Alan Beverly Hills, Calif. B.S., Stanford, 1977

Sabir, Rafiq New York, N.Y. B.A., City College (New York), 1977

Sax, Frederic Lee Rosedale, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977

Scantlebury, Velma Patricia Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Long Island, 1977

Seely, Ellen Wells New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977

Shah, Dipti V. Fresh Meadows, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Shear, Michael Peter Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Purchase), 1977

Shookster, Linda Anne Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Siegel, Robert David Jersey City, N.J. B.A., Lafayette, 1977

Sisti, Michael Brian Tenafly, N.J. B.S.E., Cooper Union, 1977

Small, Peter Alan Easton, Conn. B.A., Tufts, 1977

Smithy, William Brian Brookline, Mass. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Sobelson, Gary Alan North Bellmore, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1977

Solomon, Barry Howard Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. B.S., American (Rome), 1975

Speert, Peter Klee Brookline, Mass. B.A., Williams, 1966

Stein, Neil Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Stern, Fredric A. Rockville Centre, N.Y. B.A., B.S., Tufts, 1977

Stoler, Joan Marilyn Brookline, Mass. B.S., Brandeis, 1977

Stone, Gary Carl Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Strongin, Jonathan D. New York, N.Y. M.A., Columbia, 1974

Sulkow, Barbara Lynn B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1974

Teitelbaum, Joanne New York, N.Y. B. A., Connecticut, 1968

Valdes, Martin Hialeah, Fla. B.A., Miami, 1977

Vaughan, Luke Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Victoria II, Albert Charles New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Voutsas, Andrea K. Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1977

Wagman, Robert David Ontario, Canada B.A., Harvard, 1977

Warren, Susan Enid New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1973

Wasko, Margery Lynn Bronxville, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1977

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982 143

Weidenbaum, Mark Waterford, Conn. B.S., Connecticut, 1977

Weinstein, Beth New York, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1974

Weinstock, Martin Arthur Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1977

Weiss, Michael Jay Riverdale, N.Y. B.Sc, Bar-Ilan, 1972

Williams, John Vincent Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1977

Wilson, Scott Numo New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Wiseman, Gloria Diana New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1977

WoUack, Jan Hackensack, N.J. B.S.. Yale, 1973

Wood, Charles Macdonald Tenafly, N.J. B.S., Denison, 1976

Wu, Gloria New York, N.Y. B.A., Radcliffe, 1975

Yannopoulos, Aristomenis D. Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Yepes, Martha Cecilia New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Young, Grace May-En Fairlawn, N.J. B.A., Radcliffe, 1977

Zahl, Kenneth J. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1977

Zinberg, Joel Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Swarthmore, 1977

Zinberg, Jonathan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1977

Zollo, Kenneth Allen Farmingdale, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1977

Student Roster: Class of 1982

Abrams, Elaine Janine Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Princeton, 1978

Absatz, Michael Glenn Plainview, N.Y. B.E.S., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Adler, Frederick William New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978

Aldoroty, Robert Arthur Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1976; M.A., Columbia,

1978 Almquist, Robert Earl Bergen, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978 Amchin, Jess David Farmingdale, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978 Andrew, Susan Louise Easthampton, Mass. Sc.B., Brown, 1976 Aranoff, Jonathan Neil Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Beekman, Karen Press Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978 Bellin, Eran Yitzchak Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Bernstein, Guy Thomas Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Brown, 1978 Bezier, Jeffrey Lee Peshtigo, Wis. B. A., Princeton, 1978 Birkenbach, Mark Philip Kildeer, 111. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Blackwell, Thomas Keith Greenville, S.C. B.S., Duke, 1978 Boruchoff, Susan Elise Newton Centre, Mass. B.A., Radcliffe, 1977 Brauser, Steven Donald Woodbury, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Brenner, Gail Monsey, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1978 Brigham, Steven Chase Toledo, Ohio B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1978 Brooks, Robert Louis Sharpsburg, Md. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1974; M.S., Maryland, 1976; Ph.D., 1978 Brown, Florence M. Evanston, 111. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Bryk, Eli New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Buchness, Mary Ruth Catonsville, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Burns, Elisa Eve Bethpage, N.Y. B.A., Colgate, 1978 Cammisa, Frank P. Waterbury, Conn. B.S., Tufts, 1978 Campbell, Susan Elizabeth New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1975 Cantor, Michael Cary Massapequa, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Cherup, Lori Lyn Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1976 Chua, Streamson C. Kingston, N.Y. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1978 Clair, Darren Francis New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1976 Cody, William Collins Mountain Lakes, N.J. B. A., Dartmouth, 1978 Cohen, Jeffrey Lewis Forest Hills, N.Y. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1978 Dash, Greg I. Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978

144 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982

del Alcazar, Carlos Oscar North Bergen, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Delfs, Richard Michael Tucson, Ariz. B. A., Arizona, 1976

Delvin, Michael James Bardonia, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978

Derby, James Alan Schuylerville, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1978

Dermody, Terence Shawn Ithaca, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1978

Downey, Susan E. New York, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1978

Doyle, Werner Karim Port Jefferson Station, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook),

1978 Durand, David Bradley Rochester, N.Y. B. A., Dartmouth, 1978 Easton, Jonathan New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Endow, Curtis S. Stockton, Calif. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1977 Endrizzi, Donald Peter Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Fabiano, Fredric Boston, Mass. B.S., Boston, 1978 Feinberg, Richard Ira Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Trinity, 1977 Fiero, Thomas Patrick Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977 Fletcher, Christopher Wallace Wellesley, Mass. B.A., Wesleyan, 1978 Formichella, Donna Jean Bridgeport, Conn. B.S., Providence, 1978 Frank, David Lawrence Meadowbrook, Pa. B.A., Williams, 1978 Gelbfish, Gary Alexander Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1978 Gilchrist, Ian Charles Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978 Gomez, William New York, N.Y. B.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

1976 Grant, Gail Patrice Charleston, S.C. B.A., Yale, 1978 Greenberg, Steven Marc Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Gresalfi, Thomas John Lake Grove, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978 Griswold, Jonathan DeWitt Stratford, Conn. B.S., M.S., Yale, 1978 Harmon, Valerie Lorraine Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Brown, 1978 Harrington, William Neelis Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1974 Hart, Craig Parsippany, N.J. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1973 Honig, Peter K. Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Hutt, Douglas Allen Irvington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Jabs, Kathy Lee Bristol, Conn. B.S., Trinity, 1978 Jackness, Emily New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978 Karasik, Pamela Ellen Old Westbury, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978 Kates, Mandes Roger New Haven, Conn. B.A., Princeton, 1974; Ph.D., Yale, 1978 Kessler, Paul David New York, N.Y. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1976 King, Dennis K. Daytona Beach, Fla. B.A., Middlebury, 1978 Knoll, Charles L. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1978 Krauss, Eugene Steven Old Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978 Krug, Joseph Hoffmann Englewood, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1978 Levens, David Jon Newton Centre, Mass. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy, 1978 Levenson, Risa Catherine New York, N.Y. B.A., Radcliffe, 1978 Li, Suzanne C. Roslyn, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Licht, Jonathan Daniel Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978 Lobel, Leslie Israel New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Low, Julie Ann Belmont, Mass. B.A., Rochester, 1975 Lustbader, Ian Jay New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1978 Lynn, Richard Brian Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 McCormick, Paul Christian Rockville, Md. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Margolis, Steven Fred Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1974 Markowitz, John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976; M.A., 1978 Martin, Steven Carey Plainview, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1978 Marzuk, Peter Michael New York, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1978 Mastropolo, Rosalie Mary Eastchester, N.Y. B.S.N. , Rochester, 1976 Mazzocchi, Annmarie Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1978

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982 145

Mehalek, Karen Edith Huntington Station, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1978 Mellstrom, Mark Stanley North Mankato, Minn. B.A., Carleton, 1978 Mercurio, Mark Randolph Ridgefield, Conn. B. A., Princeton, 1978 Mirski, Anna Marie Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., St. John's, 1978 Mitchell, Alfred Ernest Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Lafayette, 1978 Moffat, Gertrude Seidel Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977 Monasky, Mark Stephen Binghamton, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Potsdam), 1978 Moscona, Anne Chicago, 111. B.A., Radcliffe, 1978 Muller, Adrienne Louise Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1978 Norton, Janet E. Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Nussbaum, Monte Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978 Oesterling, Joseph Edwin Greensburg, Ind. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Olson, Stephen Eric Cooperstown, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1978 Paul, Edward Mark Hicksville, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Pennoyer, Marguerite Anne Portland, Maine B.A., Smith, 1978 Perez, Wilfredo De La C. Miami, Fla. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Pfeffer, Deborah Lynn New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978 Philips, Mark Reid Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Plotycia, Steven Michael Eggertsville, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1978 Porder, Joseph Bernard New York, N.Y. B.A., Bennington, 1978 Price, Helen L. Summit, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1978

Quarmby, Robert Altamont, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1974; M.S., Rensse- laer Polytechnic Institute, 1978 Quartararo, Christopher Huntington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rini, Frank John New York, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1974; M.A., Colum- bia, 1976; M.Phil., 1977; Ph.D., 1978 Robbins, Peter Howard Fairlawn, N.J. B.A., Hamilton, 1978 Robbins, Philip Alan Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1978 Rodriguez, Jaime Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rodriguez, Rolando Francisco Weehawken, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rosenblatt, Marc A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Rosenzweig, Seth Edward Freeport, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978 Rottman, Jeffrey Nathan Berkeley, Calif. B.A., Princeton, 1976 Ruzal, Carrie Brenda Brooklyn, N.Y. B. A., Princeton, 1978 Salamone, Ronald Jerry East Brunswick, N.J. B.S., Stanford, 1977 Sanchez-Lluberas, Jorge A. Santurce, Puerto Rico B.S., University of Puerto Rico,

1978 Schlaff, Anthony Lewis New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978 Schneider, Peter Andrew Hamburg, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977 Schulder, Michael Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Sealfon, Stuart C. Neponsit, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Sehgal, Evan David Chevy Chase, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Shaffer, David Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978 Shaffer, Nathan New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1975 Sharp, Barbara Lea San Francisco, Calif. B.A., Yale, 1976 Sheinbaum, Roy Jonathan Woodmere, N.Y. B.Sc, McGill, 1978 Simkowitz, Philip New York, N.Y. B.S., Beloit, 1975 Sklar, Jeffrey Alan Laurelton, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978 Skowron, Gail East Northport, N.Y. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1978 Smith, Andre Leo New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1978 Smith, Mary Camden, N.Y. B.S., Houghton, 1978 Stevenson, Ellen Marie New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977 Sullivan, John Keane New York, N.Y. B.A., Holy Cross, 1969; J.D., Fordham,

1972 Sultan, Mark Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1978

146 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983

Suser, Ezra Saul Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1974

Tong, Dominic Jun Fai Honolulu, Hawaii B.S., Hawaii (Monoa), 1978

Usatine, Richard Philip Nanuet, N.Y. B. A., Williams, 1978

Veenema, Kenneth Roy Glenrock, N.J. B.S., Cornell, 1977

Vita, Joseph Andrew Katonah, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Wasserman, Hal Stuart Springfield, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Wellisz, Tadeusz Zbigniew New York, N.Y. B.A., Chicago, 1977

Whelan, Richard Lawrence Franklin Square, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1978

Wolff, David Marc New York, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1977

Wolfson, Steven Jay Valley Stream, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Yorke, Eric Robert Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978

Zeralsky, Sandra Joan Pearl River, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978

Student Roster: Class of 1983

Alonso, Jose Jr. Astoria, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Andersen, Rolf Leon Suffern, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Arliss, Jeffrey James Locust, N.J. B.S., Vermont, 1978

Bar, Michael Henry New York, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1979

Baran, Syma Deborah Levittown, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Bass, Allyson Brackett Oakland, Calif. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1975

Bauer, R. David Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Beck, Marc Lloyd New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Ben-Zvi, Jeffrey S. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1979

Black, Alexander Charlton Wellesley, Mass. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Bobella, Stephen Kurt Hackensack, N.J. B.A., Drew, 1979

Bonner, Matthew Kip Georgetown, Conn. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Boos, Stephen Charles Huntington Sta., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of

Technology, 1979 Breidbart, Scott Eric Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976 Brill, David Alan New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Brungraber, Margaret R. Lewisburg, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Bush, James William Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1979 Cahill, Peter duPont Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979 Camacho, Victor Emanuel Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979 Camerino, Vicki Jean Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978 Carpenter, Richard Owen Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.S., Duke, 1979 Caselli, Richard John Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Chalfin, Laura B. New York, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1970 Chen, William Kuang-Yu New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Christopher, Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Davidson, Peter Killip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1977 Davitz, Michael Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978 Desser, Terry Susan Beechhurst, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Dillon, John Joseph Yorktown Hts., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technolo- gy, 1978 Donnenberg, Michael Seth Levittown, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1979 Duralde, Xavier A. East Point, Ga. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Dushay, Kevin Maier Fayetteville, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979 Eaton, Bradford Hunter Pelham, N.Y. B. A., Dartmouth, 1979 Erly, William Kenneth Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Haverford, 1978 Eskenazi, Loren Beth New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Feind, Carl Robert Alpine, N.J. B.S., Antioch, 1979 Felix, Alan David New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1979 Fiorito, Joseph John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983 147

Fisher, Margaret Elizabeth Haddonfield, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Florakis, George James Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Freilich, David Ira Brooklyn, N.Y. Brooklyn College

Friedman, David Paul Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Gaines, Alan David Randolph, Mass. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1979 Garbowit, David Labe Pittsfield, Mass. B.S., Union, 1979 Genecin, Paul Baltimore, Md. B. A., Princeton, 1977 Glatt, Aaron Eli Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1979 Gliedman, Paul R. Wallkill, N.Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1979 Goldberg, Neal Benjamin Hartsdale, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1979 Goldman, Myla P. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979 Goldschmidt, Howard Zvi Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Goldstein, Michael D. Smithtown, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979 Gomez, Yvonne Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Gonzalez, Christopher Lewis Claremont, Calif. B.A., Pitzer, 1979 Gonzalez, Victoria Mary Claremont, Calif. B.A., California State (San Francisco),

1979 Green, Nancy Sue Wabon, Mass. B.S., Tufts, 1979 Gutowski, Teddy Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1979 Hall, Walter Allan Falls Church, Va. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Hanau, Lawrence Huto Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Hawke, Mary Wetherill Southampton, N.Y. B.A., Chicago, 1976 Hirschfield, Steven I. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1972 Ingram, David Lloyd Somerset, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Joffe, Mark D. Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Johnston, Maria Milagros Bergenfield, N.J. B.A., Barnard, 1979 Jones, Leon D. Rome, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Kalb, Thomas Heller Palm Beach, Fla. B. A., Princeton, 1979 Kamer, Russell Scott New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1979 Kastelman, James Steven Cranford, N.J. B.S., Princeton, 1979 Keller, Wendy A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1975 Klapper, Robert C. Far Rockaway, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Koehler, Susan Ellen Clarence, N.Y. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1979 Konecky, Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979 Kriger, Alberto Isaac Rio Piedras, P.R. B.A., Brandeis, 1979 Landry, Donald William Cambridge, Mass. B.S., Lafayette, 1975 Landzberg, Joel Serge Whitestone, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Lederman, Seth Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Letsou, George Vasilios Lowell, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Linfield, Louis S. II San Francisco, Calif. B.A., Harvard, 1977 Loomis, Karen Jay White Plains, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977 Lopez, Rafael Roberto New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Lowy, Israel Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977 Luppescu, Neal Edwin Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Lustick, Martin Ross Watertown, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978 Lytton, William Winzer Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 McCord, Mary Marshall New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1978

Macfarlane, Michael Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Long Island (C W. Post), 1975 Mackey, Steven Lee South Columbus, Ohio B.A., Columbia, 1976 Maloney, William Joseph Warren, N.Y. B.A., Stanford, 1979 Mandel, Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Manley, John C. North Port, N.Y. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1977 Matathias, Daniel J. Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Matos, Sergio E. New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1979 Melfi, Robert Joseph Wood-Ridge, N.J. B.S., Creighton, 1979

148 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983

Munro, Virginia Schaefer New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979

Neuberg, Gerald Walter Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Okun, Alexander Lawrence New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Ostrow, Steven Mark Baldwin, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979

Paek, In-Bok Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Pastor, Patricia Camuto Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1976

Pearl, Michael Lawrence Southfield, Mich. B.S., Michigan, 1979

Perkins, Archibald Simon Williamstown, Mass. B.A., Williams, 1979

Perlmutter, Jeffrey Alan Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Peterson, Louisa Thoron New York, N.Y. B.A., Colorado, 1968

Peterson, Mark William Fort Collins, Colorado B.S., Colorado State, 1979

Pierson, Richard Norris III Englewood, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1978

Pollak, Emil Martin Jr. Old Tappan, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Pollak, Jeffrey Scott New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Quinn, Thomas Joseph Wantagh, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979

Rampil, Ira Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.E.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1975

Randolph, Paula Ann Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Readling, Maris Anne Oswego, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1979

Retikas, Anthony Demetrios Akron, Ohio B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1979

Rice, Louis Bernard Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Rich, Thomas Jonathan Flourtown, Pa. B.S., Bucknell, 1979

Ring, Wendy Susan Coral Gables, Fla. B.S., Yale, 1979

Roberts, William Gary Purchase, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Rochester, Carolyn Lee Charlottesville, Va. B.A., Smith, 1979

Rosenthal, Jonathan Harry New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1973

Rovit, Adam John Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Michigan, 1979

Sacks, Andrew Jay New York, N.Y. B.A., New College, 1975

Sacks, Evan Hilary Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979

Saver, Barry Gordon Cambridge, Mass. B.S., Yale, 1976

Schlesinger, Gail Michele Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Schoifet, Scott David Somerset, N.J. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Shapiro, Matthew Scott Hewlett, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Simpson, Joseph Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979

Smires, Harvey Edward Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Smith, Ann Elizabeth Northport, N.Y. B. A., Washington, 1979

Smith, Judith Wilson Greenwich, Conn. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Spriegel, John Roberts Evanston, 111. B.S.E., Princeton, 1979

Starin, Lawrence Robert Spring Valley, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1979

Tannenbaum, Gary Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Vagelos, Randall Herodotus Watchung, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Van de Wiele, Barbara M. Alpine, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1977

Wang, Paul Johnson Indianapolis, Ind. B. A., Harvard, 1979

Wang, Timothy Cragin St. Louis, Mo. B.A., Williams, 1979

Wasserman, Marcia Sue Syosset, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1973

Weinberger, Michael Laurence Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Weinstein, Lee Scott Woodmere, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1979 Weissman, Jane Lisa New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1977 Whitley, Barbara Ellen Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Syracuse, 1971 Widom, Barbara Santa Cruz, Calif. B.A., Cornell, 1979 Wilkens, James Burton Toledo, Ohio B.S., Ohio State, 1979 Wilner, Philip Jonathan Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Wimpfheimer, Miriam Jane New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1975 Winter, Eric Herbert New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Wissler, Richard Norris Canandaigua, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1974

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 149

Yolowitz, Greg Alan Spring Valley, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1979 Yu, Leonard Tobey New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977 Zigelman, Charles Z. Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1979

Student Roster: Class of 1984

Adkins, Elijah Stanton III Salisbury, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980

AUand, David New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Alonso, Barbara Ann New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Arato, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Union, 1980

Ashmead, Duffield Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Baez, Ana Luisa New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1980

Bannister, Kyra Heather Georgetown, Conn. B.A., Vermont, 1980

Barasch, Jonathan Matthew New York, N.Y. B. A., Dartmouth, 1980

Belisle, James Thompson Babylon, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979

Bell, Robin Ellen Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1975

Berkower, Alan Stewart Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Middlebury, 1974

Booker, Gail Michele Jamaica, N.Y. B. A., Princeton, 1980

Boschi, Alessandro Sebastian Port Chester, N.Y. B. A., Columbia, 1980

Brem, Rachel Frydman Brookline, Mass. B.A., Brandeis, 1979

Brieff, David Ben Melville, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980

Brittis, Mary Ellen Yonkers, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1980

Brown, Michael Carlvan Yorktown Heights, N.Y. B. A., Dartmouth, 1979

Cardenosa, Gilda New York, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1979

Chak, Amitabh Morgantown, W. Va. B.A., Yale, 1978

Chan, Stephen Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Chietero, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1980

Clain, Michael Russell Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980

Coburn, Kenneth Doyle West Hempstead, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980

Cohen, Sally Eisenberg Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Goucher, 1964

Constantine, Sandra Mequon, Wis. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Di Franco, Matthew Joaquin Santa Cruz, Calif. B.A., California (Santa Cruz), 1979

Draga, Aspasia E. Malba, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980

Egnor, Michael Robert Catskill, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Fallon, Regis Francis Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Fayter, Judith Ann Staten Island, N.Y. B.S., Pace, 1978

Fithian, Donald Coburn Bridgeton, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

Florin, Cynthia Ann New York, N.Y. B.S., Grinnell, 1975

Ford, Jean Guillaume Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Freeman, Phillip Sanford New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1975

Gallay, Brian James White Plains, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Gewirtz, George Robert Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Goldberg, Mark Paul Chicago, 111. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Goldstein, Jeffrey Alan Southfield, Mich. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Gorton, Christopher P. Hollis, N.H. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

Goyal, Alok New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1980

Graff, Wayne Brian Merrick, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980

Graham, Jeffrey Scott Summit, N.J. B.A., Williams, 1980

Greenbaum, Linda Ellen New York City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Guthrie, Ellen Hobson Hilton Head Island, S.C. B.A., Colorado, 1980

Haspel, Kenneth Lewis West Hartford, Conn. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

Hibbard, Claire Alexandra New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Hsu, Ho-Wen Timonium, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Hyll, Marsha Karin Green Brook, N.J. B. A., Princeton, 1975

150 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984

Ivey, Louis Albert Silver Spring, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Jackson, Byron A. Shreveport, La. B.A., New York University, 1980 Jeevanandam, Valluvan M. New Milford, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Johnson, Gregory Kent Chestertown, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Johnston, Peter Shivers Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1969 Jules, Kethy Marie Elmhurst, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1980 Kao, Peter Nicholas New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Karlin, Scott Marc Greenlawn, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980 Kaye, Katherine Staten Island, N.Y. B. A., Princeton, 1980 Kazim, Michael Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Kellogg, Collins Frederick Croghan, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1977 Kim, Anthony Hyoung Queens, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980 Kim, Kami Albany, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Kimball, Robert Owen Geneva, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979 Krongrad, Arnon New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Ku, Andrew Bergenfield, N.J. B. A., Harvard, 1980 Lang, Thomas Philip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 La Scala, Carlo Paul Port Jefferson, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980 Lattimer, Douglas Gary New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975 Leibenhaut, Mark Harris Oceanside, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Levin, Neil Chevy Chase, Md. B.S.E.S., Tufts, 1980 Lewis, Allison Elizabeth Menlo Park, Calif. B.S.E., Princeton, 1980 Liberman, Laura Newton, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Lombardo, Gregory Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1968 Love, Karen Anita Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1980 Luyando, Yvonne New York, N.Y. B.A., Fordham, 1980 McDonagh, Kevin T. Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Ma, Averill. Thornwood, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Magnes, Jeffrey New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1975 Mahon, John Henry Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Notre Dame, 1980 Markowitz, Arlene Helen Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Wellesley, 1980 Mathews, Donald Marshall Schenectady, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Miller, Steven Zane Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Milrod, Barbara Louise New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979 Modic, Frank Edward Scotia, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1980 Moss, William John Demarest, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980 Mulvey, Kevin Patrick San Francisco, Calif. B.S., San Francisco, 1980 Neustein, Steven Mark West Orange, N.J. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy, 1980 Nimkin, Katherine New York, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978 Nordli, Douglas Ray Melville, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1980 Odrich, Marc Geoffrey Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 O'Keeffe, Richard Michael, Jr. Weston, Mass. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980 Olsen, Janet Louise Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Vassar, 1978 Olson, Eric Jon Chadds Ford, Pa. B. A., Princeton, 1980 Oquendo, Maria Antonia Guaynabo, Puerto Rico B.S., B.A., Tufts, 1980 Palma, James New York, N.Y. City College of New York, 1980 Pawlowski, Ann Margaret Lunnfield, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Peng, Benjamin C. H. Kew Gardens, N.Y. B.A., Rochester, 1980 Pero, Robert Thomas Hyde Park, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Proano, Maritza New York, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1980 Rabbani, LeRoy E. New York, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1980 Rautenberg, Mark Alan Ithaca, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1980 Raymond, Elizabeth Gray Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Swarthmore, 1980 Reilly, Philip Joseph New York, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1976 Reimold, Andreas Michael Dallas, Tex. B.A., Harvard, 1980

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 151

Rennert, Douglas Andrew New York, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1980

Roberts, James Wayne Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Rodrigues, Bcatriz A. Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980

Romano, Thomas Jerome Camillus, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1980

Rottkamp, John Robert Commack, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980

Ruiz, Frank Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1980

Saladini, Vincent Rocco, Jr. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Santos, Annabelle Villatuya Mollis, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980

Schmiedeberg, Phyllis N. Babylon, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1980

Schoen, Robert Edward Beverly Hills, Calif. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Schoenberg, Norman Island Park, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1980

Schriger, David Lawrence Englewood, N.J. B.A., Amherst, 1980

Schwartzbach, Gary C. Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Scuderi, Donna Maria Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980

Seymour, Neal Edward Oakdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Shaw, Andrey Shin-Yee New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Sheffield, Mary Katherine Longmeadow, Mass. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of

Technology, 1980 Singer, Meriamne Bruche New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980 Somlo, Stefan Bronx, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1980 Sorensen, Mark Francis Rockville Centre, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1980 Speirs, Robert Thomas Port Washington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Stegall, Mark Dale Crosbyton, Tex. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Stork, Philip Jacques Stewart Englewood, N.J. B.S., Harvard, 1977 Strachan, Alexander Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Fordham, 1980 Tamargo, Rafael Jesus Condado, Puerto Rico B.A., Princeton, 1980 Teichman, Faye Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1980 Tilley, Robert John Tacoma, Wash. B.S., Washington, 1980 Torres, Ramon Antonio Bronx, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1980 Turey, Maureen New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976 Weber, Pamela Ann Buffalo, N.Y. B.S., McGill, 1980 Westermann, Robert Bayless West Hartford, Conn. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Westrich, David Joshua New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980 Whitehurst, James Howell Atlanta, Ga. B.S., Vanderbilt, 1979 Whitley, Markus Andrew Bowie, Md. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1980 Whitlock, Mary Elizabeth Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1980 Wiedermann, Joseph Gad Englewood, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Winston, Julia Lynn Oakland, N.J. B.S., Bucknell, 1979 Wirth, Robert Lockridge Palo Alto, Calif . B.S.E., Michigan, 1974 Witham, Rebecca Sue Needham, Mass. B.S., Yale, 1979 Wong, Shing-Chiu East Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Wong, Ting Hung New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1980 Yancopoulos, George Damis Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Yen, Catherine Eleanor Honolulu, Hawaii B.S., Hawaii, 1979 Yuen, Jeffrey C. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977

Index

Absence, leave of, 43

Academic discipline: see Regulations

Academic year: calendar, 3-4; divisions 44

Administration: Joint Administrative Board, 8; staff, 8

Admission(s): Committee on, 7, 26-27; application procedure, 26-27; require- ments, 26, 27; application fee, 26, 29; to advanced standing, 27; of foreign students, 27

Administrative staff, 8

Advanced standing, 27

Advisory Committee to the Dean, Chair- men's, 7

Affiliated hospitals, 14-16, 22-25

Alpha Omega Alpha, 42

Alumni Association, 42

Anatomy: courses, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 55-56

Anesthesiology: course, 46; officers of instruction, 56-59

Application for degrees, 3-4, 30-31; for admission, 26-27; fees, 26; for financial aid, 32-41

Attendance, 28

Auditing courses, 28

Augustus C. Long Library, 17, 20

Awards, 39-41, 52

Bard Hall, 12, 32

Bard Haven Towers, 13, 32

Bassett, Mary Imogene, Hospital, 15, 22

Biochemistry: course, 45; officers of

instruction, 59-60 Biology: abnormal human, course, 44 Biophysics and biophysical chemistry,

special program in, 51 Biostatistics, officers of instruction, 116

Calendar, Academic, 3-4

Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Re- search, 20-21

Center for Community Health Systems, 21

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, 50

Certificate in psychoanalysis, 50

Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the Dean, 7

Clinical genetics, special program in, 51

College of Physicians and Surgeons: history, purpose, and location, 18-20; program of instruction, 43-52

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, 11, 18-21

Columbia University: relation to P&S, history, 19-20; library, 20; campus facilities, 41

Conduct, 28

Course numbers, key to, 44

Courses: summary of curriculum, 44; basic science and introductory clinical, 44-46; major clinical year, 46-49; Fourth year, 49; electives, 43; for prac- ticing physicians and specialists, 53

Curriculum: Committee on, 7; summary of, 44

Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, 5 Degrees: application dates, 3-4, 30-31; dates of award, 3-4; M.S., 50; M.D., 18, 49-50; Med. Sc.D., 53, 54; Ph.D., 49, 50, 51; see also Certificate in psychoanalysis; National Board exami- nations Dental and Oral Surgery, School of, 19 Departments of Instruction, 55-136 Dermatology: course, 47; officers of

instruction, 60-62 Discipline, academic: see Regulations Doctor of Medical Science degree, 53, 54 Doctor of Medicine degree, 18; in combi- nation with M.P.H. degree, 49; in combination with Ph.D. degree, 49 Doctor of Philosophy degree; in combina- tion with M.D. degree, 49; in nutrition, 50; in biophysics and biophysical chem- istry, 51 Dormitories, 32

INDEX 153

Emeriti officers, 8-10

Employment for spouses of students, 32

Endowed lectureships, 52

Endowed scholarship funds, 32-37

Environmental Health Sciences, officers of instruction, 117

Epidemiology, officers of instruction, 117-18

Equipment: estimated cost of, 31; require- ment 31-32

Executive Committee of the Faculty Council, 5

Expenses, estimated, 31; see also Fees

Faculty Council: Executive Committee of the, 5; of the Faculty of Medicine, 6-7

Faculty of Medicine, 5-10

Fees: payment of, 3; application, 26, 29; health service and hospital insurance, 29; late, 30; withdrawal and adjustment of, 30; see also Expenses, estimated

Financial aid, 32-41

Foreign students: admission of, 27; loans to, 37

General Education, University Program of, 51

Genetics: see Human Genetics and Devel- opment

Gift funds, 37

Grades and promotions, 43-44

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences: relation to P&S, 49

Gynecology: see Obstetrics and Gynecol- ogy

Harlem Hospital Center, 14, 23

Health administration: officers of instruc- tion, 118-20

Health service, 29

Helen Hayes Hospital, 16, 23

History of the College and the University, 19-20

Hospitals, teaching, 14-16, 22-25

Housing, 32

Human Genetics and Development: course, 45; officers of instruction, 62- 63

Human nutrition, 21

Institute of Cancer Research, 20-21 Institute of Human Nutrition, 21

International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction, 21

Joint Administrative Board, 8

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center Augustus Long Li- brary, 17, 20

Key to course numbers, 44

Leaves of absence, 43-44 Lectureships, endowed, 52 Libraries: Health Sciences, 17, 20;

University, 20, 41 Loans, 37-39

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, 15, 22

Master of Science degree: in human nutri- tion, 50; in physical therapy and occu- pational therapy, 50

Medical service to students, 29

Medicine: courses, 45, 46, 47; officers of instruction, 63-73

Microbiology: course, 45; officers of instruction, 73-75

Microscopes, 31

Morristown Memorial Hospital, 23

National Board examinations, 44

Neurological Surgery, officers of instruc- tion, 75-76

Neurology: teaching hospital, 22; courses, 47; officers of instruction, 76-79

Nondiscriminatory policies, statement of, 18-19

Nursing, School of, 19

Nutrition: course, 45; special programs in, 50; see also Institute of Human Nutri- tion

Obstetrics and Gynecology: teaching hos- pital, 22; course, 47; officers of instruc- tion, 79-83

Occupational therapy, see Physical Ther- apy; Master of Science degree

Ophthalmology: teaching hospital, 22; officers of instruction, 83-86

Orthopedic Surgery: teaching hospital. 22; course, 47; officers of instruction, 86-88

154 INDEX

Otolaryngology: course, 48; officers of

instruction, 89-90 Overlook Hospital, 16, 24

P&S Club, 41

Pathology: courses, 45, 46; officers of instruction, 90-96

Pediatrics: teaching hospital, 22; course, 48; officers of instruction, 96-103

Pharmacology: course, 46; officers of instruction, 103-4

Physical therapy and occupational thera- py, special programs in, 50; see also Rehabilitation Medicine

Physicians and Surgeons: see College of Physicians and Surgeons

Physiology: courses, 45, 46; officers of instruction, 104-5

Population and Family Health, officers of instruction, 120

Postgraduate Programs, 53-54

Presbyterian Hospital, 8, 22

President of the University, 5

Prizes, 39-41, 52

Program of instruction for the M.D. degree, 43; summary of curriculum, 44

Programs, postgraduate, 53-54

Programs, special: for the Ph.D. degree, 49-51; in physical therapy and occupa- tional therapy, 50; in psychoanalytic medicine, 50; in nutrition, 50; in biophy- sics and biophysical chemistry, 51; in clinical genetics, 51

Promotions, grades and, 43-44

Psychiatric Institute, New York State, 19, 25

Psychiatry: teaching hospital, 22; courses, 46, 48; officers of instruction, 105-15

Psychoanalytic Training and Research, Center for, special programs, 50

Public Health: courses, 46; officers of instruction, 116-23; School of, 19

Radiology: courses, 48; officers of instruc- tion, 123-26

Readmission, 43-44

Registration, 27; dates, 3 late, 30

Regulations, University, 27

Rehabilitation Medicine: course, 48; offi- cers of instruction, 127-29

Religious holidays and attendance, 28

Research: cancer, 20-21; in human reproduction, 21; in nutrition, 21, 50; in clinical genetics, 51

Residence halls, 32

Roosevelt Hospital Division, 15, 24

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division, 14, 24

St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, 24

Scholarships, 32-37

Seminar, General Education, 51-52

Sociomedical Sciences, officers of instruc- tion, 121

Specialization: programs for, 49-51; graduate, 53-54

Statement of nondiscriminatory policies, 18-19

Students: selection of 26-27; medical service to, 29; financial aid, 32-41; housing, 32; activities, 41

Students, roster of: internship placement. Class of 1980, 137-40; Class of 1981, 140-43; Class of 1982, 143-146; Class of 1983, 146-49; Class of 1984, 149-51

Surgery: courses, 48; officers of instruc- tion, 129-34

Teaching hospitals, 14-16, 22-25 Teaching staff of the departments: see

under names of departments Transcripts, 31 Tropical medicine: officers of instruction,

121-22 Tuition, 29; refund of, 30

University Program of General Education,

51-52 University Rights, Reservation of, 19 University Senate delegates, 8 Urology: teaching hospital, 22; course, 48;

officers of instruction, 134-36

Vice President for Health Sciences, 5 Visiting professorship, 52

Washington Heights Health and Teaching

Center, 19 William Black Medical Research Center,

20 Withdrawal and adjustment of fees, 30

The Morningside Heights Area of New York City

The Morningside Campus & Environs

West 123rd Street

Jewish Theological Seminary

West 122nd Street

Corpus Christ! Church

Grant Sarasota

Bancroft The Fairholm

West 121st Street

Macy Teachers College

West 120th Street

West 119th Street

Helen Millicent G( odhart Mclntosl / Itschul Center

West 116th Street

620 616 Casa 600 Hlsp^nica

.635

W jodbridge "'»=' 617 Pandm im

West 115th Street

St. Hilda's and

; I. Hugh's School ^^*^''

Broadway Presbyter an Church

Pupin

Marcellus Hartley Dodge Physical Fitness Center

Chandler ||J^ Havemeyer

Seeley W Mudd Engineering Terrace

Mathematics Earl Lewisohn Dodge

Low

Memorial

Library

-Sherman Fairchild Center

^ Schermerhorn Ext

s i Schermerhorn

Xi.

>, Avery 2 V Ext. f

* i

St Paul's Chapel East Hall

West 119th Street

423

Butler Hall

West 118th Street

International Affairs

College Walk

Ferris Booth Carman

Butler Library

Harlincss Thealfe

Hamilton

Hartley

Livingston

ColuiiibUiHniltli Service^

John Jay

House

West 116th Street

1121-25 Post Office

West 11 5th Street

Woman's Hospital

Notre Dame Church Ell White

West 114th Street

George Barry Ford

Hogan

Robert Watt

Ruggles

St Luke's Hospital

Armstrong

West 113th Street

West 112th Street

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center Columbia University

HEALTH SCIENCES CAMPUS

Alumni Auditorium Augustus Long Library Dana W. Atchley Pavilion

The Babies Hospital Babies Hospital Research, Teaching, and Office Addition

Bard Hall Medical Student

Residence

Bard Haven Towers

William Black Medical

Research Building

Cancer Center/Institute of

Cancer Research

Central Service Building

College of Physicians and

Surgeons

Center for Community

Health Systems

13

22

23

7 16 20

2712

School of Denial and Oral

Surgery

Georgian Nurses

Residence

Edward S. Harkness Eye

Institute

Eye Institute Research

Laboratories

Harkness Memorial Hall

Harkness Pavilion

Pauline A. Hartford

Memorial Chapel

Julius and Armand

Hammer Health Sciences

Center

Institute of Human

Nutrition

International Institute for

the Study of Human

Reproduction

6 Anna C. Maxwell Hall, School of Nursing Residence

5 The Neurological Institute of New York

6 School of Nursing 25 Parking facilities

17 Presbyterian Hospital

New York Orthopedic

Hospital Sloane Hospital for

Women Squler Urological Clinic 4 New York State

Psychiatric Institute 4 Psychoanalytic Clinic 15 School of Public Health 19 Radiotherapy Center

13 Vanderbllt Clinic

14 Vanderbllt Clinic Addition

The Faculty of Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS

1981-1982

Inquiries

POST OFFICE ADDRESS:

College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

TELEPHONE INQUIRIES:

Office of Admissions: (Area code 212) 694-3596 Office of Financial Aid: (Area code 212) 694-4100

OTHER BULLETINS OF THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE:

Human Nutrition

Nursing (including the Graduate Programs: Adult/Child Acute Care, Adult Nurse Practitioner, Gerontology, Maternity Nursing-Nurse Midwifery, Nurse Anesthesia, Pediatric Nursing Ambulatory Care, Perinatal Nursing, Adult/Child Psychiatric-Community Mental Health)

Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Continuing Education in the Heahh Sciences: Postgraduate Courses

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

Public Health

^£W YORK, N.Y. 'lO03gr

The Faculty of Medicine y y

College of Physicians ^""^ ^/^^> ^

& Surgeons

Columbia University Bulletin

1981-1982

Contents

Academic Calendar 3

Health Sciences Administration 6

Faculty of Medicine 6

College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals 19

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid 27

Application for Admission, 27. Registration, 28. Regulations, 28. Auditing Courses, 29. Fees, 29. Application for a Degree, 31. Requests for Transcripts, 32. Estimated Ex- penses, 32. Housing, 32. Financial Aid, 33. Student and Alumni Activities, 41 .

Program of Instruction 43

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence, 43. Key to Course Numbers, 44. Summary of Curriculum, 44. Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses, 44. Major Clinical Year, 46. Fourth Year, 48. Special Programs, 49. Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship, 51. Prizes and Awards, 51.

Postgraduate Programs 53

Departments of Instruction 55

Anatomy and Cell Biology, 55. Anesthesiology, 56. Biochemistry, 59. Dermatology, 61. Human Genetics and Development, 62. Medicine, 64. Microbiology, 74. Neurological Surgery, 76. Neurology, 77. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 80. Ophthalmology, 84. Or- thopedic Surgery, 87. Otolaryngology, 89. Pathology, 91. Pediatrics, 96. Pharmacol- ogy, 103. Physiology, 105. Psychiatry, 106. Public Health, 117. Radiology, 126. Rehabilitation Medicine, 129. Surgery, 133. Urology, 138.

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1981 141

Student Roster 144

Index 157

Academic Calendar, 1981-1982

Major Religious Holidays

For a statement of University policy on absence for the observance of religious holidays see Admission, Registration, and Expenses Attendance.

JUNE

22-26 Monday-Friday.* Registration for fourth-year students.

22 Monday, through July 2, Thursday.' Registration for third-year students.

JULY

1 Wednesday. Academic year begins for fourth-year students.

4 Saturday. Independence Day. Holiday for fourth-year students.

6 Monday. Major Clinical Year begins for third-year students. AUGUST

3 Monday. t Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in October (see September 10).

24-28 Monday-Friday. Optional early registration for second-year students. SEPTEMBER

3 Thursday.* Registration for first-year students.

4 Friday.* Registration for second-year students.

7 Monday. Labor Day. Holiday for third- and fourth-year students.

8 Tuesday. Academic year begins for first- and second-year students. 10 Thursday. Last day to file late applications for October degrees. OCTOBER

28 Wednesday. Award of October degrees.

NOVEMBER

3 Tuesday. Election Day. Holiday for first- and second-year students.

6 Friday.f Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in January (see December 11).

26-27 Thursday-Friday. Thanksgiving holidays for first-, second-, and third-year students.

'Students allowed to register after the period specified must pay a late fee. ^Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

4 ACADEMIC CALENDAR

DECEMBER

1 1 Friday. Last day to file late applications for January degrees.

19 Saturday, through January 3, 1982, Sunday. Vacation for first-, second-, and third-year students.

21 Friday. First semester ends for first-year students. JANUARY

4 Monday. Second semester begins for first-year students. 27 Wednesday. Award of January degrees. FEBRUARY

22 Monday. Washington's Birthday. Holiday for first- and second-year students.

22 Monday.* Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in May (see April 1).

MARCH

7 Sunday. Annual Commemoration Service in St. Paul's Chapel. APRIL

I Thursday. Last day to file late applications for May degrees.

3 Saturday, through April 11, Sunday. Vacation for first- and second-year students.

6-7 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Boards Part II for students failing September 22-23 examination.

MAY

5 Wednesday. Dean's Day for Medical Student Research.

19 Wednesday. Columbia University Commencement and Convocation of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

29 Saturday, through June 9, Wednesday. Study period for second-year students.

31 Monday. Memorial Day. Holiday for first-, second-, and third-year students.

JUNE

8-9 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Boards Part I for second-year students.

10 Thursday, through July 4, Sunday. Vacation for second-year students.

I I Friday. Second semester ends for first-year students.

18 Friday. Major Clinical Year concludes for third-year students.

JULY

1 Thursday. Elective curriculum begins for third-year students.

5 Monday. Major Clinical Year begins for second-year students.

^Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

ACADEMIC CALENDAR 5

Dates of National Board Exams

Part I September 9- 1 0, 1 98 1 . Not given at P&S. June 8-9, 1982. Required by P&S.

Part II September 22-23, 1981. Required by P&S. April 6-7, 1982. Not given at P&S.

Health Sciences Administration

MICHAEL I. SOVERN, LL.B., LL.D. President of the University

ROBERT F. GOLDBERGER, M.D. Provost of the University; Vice President for Health Sciences

PETER LIKINS, Ph.D. Provost of the University

FRITZ R. STERN, Ph.D. Provost of the University

KATHLEEN MULLINEX, Ph.D. Deputy Provost for Health Sciences

NORMAN E. TOY, D.B. A. Deputy Vice President for Health Sciences Administration

The Faculty of Medicine

DONALD F. TAPLEY, M.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine

BERNARD CHALLENOR, M.D. Associate Dean for Hospital Affairs

JOSE M. FERRER, M.D. Associate Dean for Postgraduate Education

FREDERICK G. HOFMANN, Ph.D. Associate Dean for Admissions

LINDA D. LEWIS, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs

THOMAS Q. MORRIS, M.D. Associate Dean for Academic Affairs

DOROTHY ESTES, M.D. Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs

LESTER M. GELLER, M.D. Assistant Dean for Student and Curricular Affairs

INEZ E. KLINCK, B. A. Assistant Dean for Academic Administration

PAUL T. McLOUGHLIN, M.B.A. Assistant Dean for Administrative Affairs

JOANN S. JAMANN, Ed.D. Dean of the School of Nursing

ROBERT J. WEISS, M.D. Dean of the School of Public Health

MICHAEL O'CONNOR, M.P.A. Assistant Dean for Administration, School of Public Health

STEPHEN WOTMAN, D.D.S. Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs, School of Public Health

Executive Committee of the Faculty Council

Donald F. Tapley {chairman) Glenda J. Garvey Donald S. Kornfeld

Henrik H. Bendixen Harold S. Ginsberg Elizabeth A. Mahoney

William J. Casarella Sylvia P. Griffiths Henry M. Spotnitz

Bernard D. Challenor Douglas N. Ishii Francis G. Symonds, Jr. Isidore S. Edelman

Faculty Council of the Faculty of Medicine

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 7

Maxwell Abramson

Dennis J. Allendorf

George B. Ambrose

Ronald A. Andree

John L. Antunes

Robert B. Armstrong

Kimball C. Atwood

Stephen J. Atwood

Endre A. Balazs

Arthur Bank 'Jennifer J. Bell

Henrik H. Bendixen

Ruth E. Benesch

John Bilezikian

Laszlo Z. Bito

Louis S. Blancato

Andrew Blitzer

Stanley Braham 'Leonard Brand

A. Whitley Branwood

Marjorie A. Bredice

Ronald Brisman

Donald C. Brody

Charles J. Campbell 'Bernard Challenor

Solan Chao

Leonard Chess

Stanley Cortell

Nicholas Cunningham

Mary G. McCrea Curnen

Peter Danilo

Barbara J. Decker

Ralph B. Dell

Darryl C. DeVivo

Barbara S. Dohrenwend

Anthony Donn

John A. Downey *I. S. Edelman

Nas S. Eftekhar 'Rose Ruth Ellison

Raimond Emmers

Cecilia M. Fenoglio

John J. Fenoglio 'Kenneth A. Forde

Harold Fox

Alexander Garcia 'Glenda Garvey

Lester Geller

Michael Gershon 'Harold S. Ginsberg

Alexander H. Glassman

Arnold P. Gold

Daniel J. Goldberg

Carolyn P. Greenberg

Sylvia P. Griffiths

Ramreddy V. Guntaka

Leonard C. Harber

Constance J. Hayes "Margaret C. Heagarty

David S. Hodes

Brian F. Hoffman 'Douglas Ishii

JoAnn Jamann

Ivo P. Janecka

Karen Kaplan

Arthur Karlin

Michael Katz

Shyam M. Khanna "Donald W. King "Thomas C. King

Richard D. Kittredge 'Donald S. Kornfeld

Alvin 1. Krasna

Dolores Kreisman

Marianne Legato

Linda D. Lewis

Arnold Lisio 'Elizabeth A. Mahoney

Sidney Malitz

Eric Marcus

Eric C. Martin

Marie-France Maylie- Pfenninger

Christine Milcarek

Dorothy A. Miller

Thomas Q. Morris

Jane H. Morse

Stanley Myers

William L. Nastuk

Hugh Nellans

Harold C. Neu

Barbara C. Neuhaus

John F. Nicholson

Hyman Nossel

Roman Nowygrod

Eladio A. Nunez

Carl A. Olsson

Carmen Ortiz-Neu

Timothy A. Pedley

Smriti Penwar

Peter J. Puchner

John D. Rainer

Keith Reemtsma

Ronald O. Rieder

James L. Roberts

Allan G. Rosenfield

John A. Ross

Lewis P. Rowland

James H. Ryan

Kevin V. Sanborn

Saul Sanders

Harvey Schneier

Gloria O. Schrager

William B. Seaman

David Shaffer

Patrick E. Shrout

Saul Silverstein

Michael I. Sovern 'Henry M. Spotnitz

Bennett Stein

Elmer Struening

Francis L. Symonds, Jr.

John V. Taggart

Donald F. Tapley

Virginia M. Tennyson 'Gerard M. Turino

Raymond L. Vande Wiele

Gilbert J. Vosburgh

Michelle P. Warren

Robert J. Weiss

Marcelle M. Willock

Andrew L. Wit 'Marianne Wolff

Stuart Yudofsky

Non-voting Participants

Charles A. Ashley Robert S. Beekman

'Jennifer Bell Arun K. Bhattacharyya

Thomas Blumenfeld Robert E. Canfield

'Member of Executive Committee "Senator

8 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

Thomas F. Dillon Dorothy Estes Jose M. Ferrer Gary Gambuti Marguerite Gates Rachael Goldstein Frederick G. Hofmann Frank E. laquinta Norman Kahn

Eric R. Kandel Inez E. Klinck Robert Lindsay Paul McLoughlin William F. Minogue James A. Pierce Mae Rudolph Charles T. Ryder Harvey Schneier

Sol Spiegelman Mervyn W. Susser David S. Svahn Gerald Thomson Norman E. Toy Stephen Wang Walter Wichern Myron Winick 'Marianne Wolff

Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the Dean

Donald F. Tapley (chairman) Maxwell Abramson Charles A. Ashley Henrik Bendixen Donald A. Bradley Charles J. Campbell Robert E. Canfield Paul J. Cantor Bernard D. Challenor John A. Downey Isidore S. Edelman Dorothy Estes Jose M. Ferrer Allan Formicola Gary Gambuti Alexander Garcia Lester Geller

Michael Gershon Harold S. Ginsberg Rachael Goldstein Leonard Harber Robert E. Heinlein Brian F. Hoffman Frederick Hofmann JoAnn Jamann Michael Katz Donald W. King Linda Lewis Paul McLoughlin Sidney Malitz William F. Minogue Thomas S. Morris Edward S. Noroian Carl Olsson

Keith Reemtsma Rodolfo Reyes Lewis P. Rowland Charles T. Ryder William B. Seaman Philip J. Sharkey Sol Spiegelman Bennett Stein Mervyn Susser John V. Taggart Norman E. Toy Raymond L. Vande Wiele Stephen F. Wang Robert J. Weiss Alexander H. Williams Myron Winick

Committees

ADMISSIONS: Associate Dean Hofmann {chairman); Professors Bell, Blank, Braham, Branche, Brust, Donn, Downey, Dunton, Frantz, Gambino, Grossbard, Harvey, Housepian, Jagiello, Jewett, Linda Lewis {ex officio), Moore, Ortiz-Neu, Pierson, Schachter {ex officio), Silverstein, Jeanne A. Smith, Spotnitz, Jeffrey A. Stein, Thornhill; Dean Tapley {ex officio); John Markowitz and Harold Wasserman {students).

CURRICULUM: Dr. Norman Kahn {chairman); Professors Abramson, Arkow, Atwood, Bertsch, Birkhoff, Shu Chien, Despommier, C. Fenoglio, J. Fenoglio, Fine, Geller, Ginsberg, Gold, Harvey, Hoffman, Horowitz, Keim, Linda Lewis {ex officio), Lorch, Marcus, Myers, Nicholson, Nocenti, Nunez, Petrie, Post, Rosenberg, Sanborn, Spotnitz, B. D. Srinivasan; Flora Atkins (ex officio), Rachael Goldstein {ex officio); and Ian Gilchrist, Peter Kao, Virginia Munro, Rocky Schoen, Mark Sultan, and Paul Wang {students).

Delegates to the University Senate

Jennifer J. Bell, Leonard Brand, Margaret C. Heagarty, Donald W. King, Thomas C. King, Gerard Turino, Marianne Wolff, and two student delegates.

"Senator

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 9

Joint Administrative Board

REPRESENTING COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: Thomas D. Flynn, David B. Hertz, Joan Konner, Walsh McDermott, and Michael I. Sovern

REPRESENTING PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL: John W. Brooks, Thomas H. Choate, Felix E. Demartini, George S. Dillon, Jon R. Katzenbach, Ralph F. Leach, Sidney J. Weinberg, Jr., and Myles V. Whalen, Jr.

Administrative Staff

TERI VAN TATENHOVE. Executive Assistant to the Vice President for Health Sciences

MARY J. SULLIVAN. Assistant to the Dean

BERNIS D. MOSS, Jr. Business Officer

SHEILA BRENNER. Financial Aid Officer

JOAN BENNIS. Director of the Office of Admissions

Officers Emeriti

HENRY AR ANOW, JR. Lambert Professor Emeritus of Medicine

DANA W. ATCHLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

VIOLA BERNARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

STANLEY BRADLEY. Bard Professor Emeritus of Medicine

HAROLD W. BROWN. Professor Emeritus of Parasitology

GORDON M. BRUCE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

LESTER CAHN. Professor Emeritus of Oral Pathology

MARY E. CALLAHAN. Professor Emeritus of Physical Therapy

ARTHUR C ARR . Professor Emeritus of Medical Psychology

SIDNEY CARTER. Professor Emeritus of Neurology

ERWIN CH ARGAFF. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

JOHN J. CONLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology

WILFRED M. COPENHAVER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

ANDRE F. COURNAND. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

DAVID CO WEN . Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

GEORGE F. CRIKELAIR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

EDWARD C. CURNEN, Jr. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

ROBERT C. DARLING. Simon Baruch Professor Emeritus of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center

View of Bard Hall from Riverside Drive

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Martin Luther King, Jr., Pavilion, Harlem Hospital Center

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St. Luke's Hospital Center

Roosevelt Hospital

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Overlook Hospital

Helen Hayes Hospital

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center- Augustus Long Library

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is guided by the principle that medical education is university education. The acquisition of knowledge and skills is important in professional education, but far more vital is a profound understanding of the science, the art, and the ethic within which both knowledge and skill are applied. As a part of Columbia University, the College builds its curriculum, selects its officers of instruction, and marshals its enormous resources of equipment and clinical experience to develop in the student this understanding of medicine. Within the curriculum for the M.D. degree is the fundamental knowledge upon which later specialization is built, and from which the natural bent is discovered toward general or special practice, or toward research, teaching, or administration. The postgraduate programs of the College provide training in the specialties, help the graduate physician to keep abreast of new knowledge, and support the research from which the physician's knowledge develops.

Statement of Nondiscriminatory Policies

The University is required by certain Federal statutes and administrative regulations to publish the following statements:

Consistent with the requirements of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, as amended, and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R., the University does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the conduct or operation of its education programs or activities (including employment therein and admission thereto). Inquiries concerning the application of Title IX and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R. may be referred to Ms. Rosalind S. Fink, the Director of the University's Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action (305 Low Memorial Library, New York, N.Y. 10027, telephone 212-280-5511), or to the Director, Office for Civil Rights (Region II), 26 Federal Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10007.

Columbia University admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the University. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other University-administered programs.

Consistent with the requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and Part 84 of 45 C.F.R. , the University does not discriminate on the basis of handicap in admission or access to, or employment in, its programs and activities. Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified handicapped workers.

The University in addition desires to call attention to other laws and regulations that protect employees, students, and applicants.

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin in programs or activities receiving Federal financial assistance. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits employment discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. Executive Order 11246, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin and requires affirmative action to ensure equality of opportunity in all aspects of employ- ment.

The Equal Pay Act of 1963 prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in rates of pay. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of age.

20 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

The Columbia University Senate on December 1, 1978, passed a resolution announcing its general educational policy on discrimination which reaffirms the University's commitment to nondiscriminatory policies in the above-mentioned categories, as well as its policy not to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.

Section 402 of the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended, prohibits job discrimination and requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified special disabled veterans and veterans of the Vietnam era.

All employees, students, and applicants are protected from coercion, intimidation, interfer- ence or discrimination for filing a complaint or assisting in an investigation under any of the foregoing policies and laws.

The University's Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action has also been designated to coordinate the University's compliance activities under each of the programs referred to above. Any employee who believes that he or she has been denied equal opportunity should contact this Office, which will investigate complaints and counsel employees on questions relating to equal opportunity and affirmative action.

The University's Equal Opportunity Office has also been designated to coordinate the University's compliance activities under each of the programs referred to above.

Reservation of University Rights

This bulletin is intended for the guidance of persons applying for or considering application for admission to Columbia University and for the guidance of Columbia students and faculty. The bulletin sets forth in general the manner in which the University intends to proceed with respect to the matters set forth herein, but the University reserves the right to depart without notice from the terms of this bulletin. This bulletin is not intended to be and should not be regarded as a contract between the University and any student or other person.

History of the College and University

Columbia University began as King's College, which was founded in 1754 by royal grant of George II, King of England, "for the Instruction of Youth in the Learned Languages, and the Liberal Arts and Sciences." The American Revolution interrupted its program, but in 1784 it was reopened as Columbia College. In 1912 the title was changed to Columbia University in the City of New York.

King's College organized a medical faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the North American Colonies to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine. The first graduates in medicine from the College were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam, who received the degree of Bachelor of Medicine in May 1769, and that of Doctor of Medicine in May 1770 and May 1771, respectively. Instruction in medicine was given until interrupted by the Revolution and the occupation of New York by the British, which lasted until November 25, 1783. In 1784 instruction was resumed in the academic departments, and in December of the same year the medical faculty was reestablished. In 1814 the medical faculty of Columbia College was merged with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, which had obtained an independent charter in 1807. In 1860, by agreement between the Trustees of the two institutions, the College of Physicians and Surgeons became the Medical Department of Columbia College; from that time on the diplomas of the graduates were signed by the President of Columbia College as well as by the President of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The connection was only a nominal one, however, until 1891, when the college was incorporated as an integral part of the University. Since September 1917, women have been admitted to the College on the same basis as men.

The Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center was opened in the spring of 1928, seven years after the establishment of a permanent alliance between Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital. It consists of the following units: the divisions of the University Faculty of Medicine (the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the School of Nursing, the School of

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 21

Public Health); the University School of Dental and Oral Surgery; the Presbyterian Hospital and its subdivisions; the New York State Psychiatric Institute; and the Washington Heights Health and Teaching Center.

The Medical Center occupies a plot of land given to Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital by Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness and Mr. Edward S. Harkness. It comprises about twenty acres extending from West 165th Street to West 168th Street and from Broadway to Riverside Drive and is readily accessible from all parts of the city. A map of the Medical Center is given on the inside back cover.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is at 630 West 168th Street between Broadway and Fort Washington Avenue in a seventeen-story building, each floor of which connects with the wards and services of the Presbyterian Hospital. The William Black Medical Research Building is a twenty-story building, containing research laboratories for the faculty members of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. It is connected with the College building and is located at 168th Street and Fort Washington Avenue. The Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, a twenty-story structure diagonally opposite the William Black Medical Research Building, opened its teaching, research, and library facilities in 1976.

Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library

The Columbia University Health Sciences Library is housed in the Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, 701 West 168th Street. The four floors occupied by the library offer a comfortable atmosphere conducive to study, including such amenities as individual study carrels, group study and conference rooms, typing rooms, and a leisure reading lounge.

With more than 360,000 volumes and a staff of 40, the Health Sciences Library is one of the largest medical center libraries in the United States. It is well able to serve the needs of faculty, students, and researchers in the health sciences disciplines. More than 3,000 periodicals are received regularly. An entire floor of the library has been designated as a media center and is equipped with a variety of audiovisual materials. In addition to traditional reference services, the library offers computerized literature searching on several data bases, including MEDLARS. Materials describing library services are available on request.

Other Columbia libraries, located on the Morningside campus, are open to all students and faculty who carry Columbia identification cards. The main collection is housed in Butler Library; special and departmental collections are housed in other buildings on the campus. Columbia students and faculty are also permitted access to the collections of approximately twenty other research institutions including Stanford and Yale Universities, under the auspices of the Research Libraries Group. Information about the Research Libraries Group can be obtained from the Health Sciences Library.

Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research

The Cancer Research Center was established in 1973. In 1977 it was designated the Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research. In 1979 the Center was awarded Comprehensive status by the National Cancer Institute in recognition of its broad responsibility for research, patient care, and cancer control activities. The Center coordinates, integrates, and facilitates cancer research, education, and patient care in the Health Sciences Faculties of Columbia University and its affiliated hospitals in New York City Presbyterian, St. Luke's, Roosevelt, Harlem as well as Overlook in Summit, New Jersey, and Morristown Memorial Hospital in New Jersey. The Cancer Center was organized to effect the efficient and cooperative use of all Center resources, maximize the dissemination of information among Center personnel, and facilitate the rapid translation of cancer research findings into programs for improving capabilities for the prevention of cancer and the care of patients with cancer.

The Institute of Cancer Research of Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, was established in 1911 with funds bequeathed to the University by George

22 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

Crocker. It moved from its original quarters on 116th Street to the campus of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in 1938.

The Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Institute of Cancer Research were separated in 1980 to function as two separate entities. While both are mutually involved in a clinical and basic research cancer effort, their administrations function autonomously.

Center for Community Health Systems

The Center for Community Health Systems is an interdisciplinary and interdepartmental health services and health policy research and development center which enlists varied resources of the University, particularly those of the Faculty of Medicine and its affiliated hospitals, in a systematic study of problems in the organization and delivery of health care, with a predominant, though not exclusive, focus on urban areas.

Institute of Human Nutrition

The Institute of Human Nutrition is an interdisciplinary unit whose mission is to study all aspects of nutrition that relate to human health. The Institute is organized into three primary divisions: Growth and Development, Nutrition and Metabolism, and Community Nutrition. Although each division conducts its own research program and offers its own program of instruction, these are highly integrated in order to achieve two basic goals: research in all areas of human nutrition and an integrated teaching program in areas of nutrition relevant to the physician and medical scientist.

To achieve this integration of purpose and at the same time allow for the specialization necessary for the best research and teaching, combined research projects between the divisions are under way, and joint seminars and courses involving faculty and students in all three divisions are conducted. Constant interchange of ideas is fostered through weekly combined staff conferences and special lectures which are open to the medical center community. Through its Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy, and postdoctoral programs, the Institute aims to train individuals for scholarly activities in university and research centers that are in the forefront of the movement to advance nutrition as a health science.

The facilities of the Institute include laboratories in the William Black Medical Research Center, and the Obesity Center and Nutrition and Metabolic Research Center at St. Luke's Hospital Center. The office of the Director and other administrative offices are located on the seventh floor of the Health Sciences Center.

International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction

The International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction was founded in 1965 by Dr. Howard C. Taylor and was made possible by a substantial grant from the Ford Foundation. The primary purpose of the founders was to foster research in the sciences relevant to the solution of the world population problem. In more recent years, the aims of the Institute have been interpreted more broadly to include reproductive health services for women, interna- tional research and technical assistance, social science research, and academic programs. The Institute now consists of three centers.

The Center for Reproductive Sciences is composed of an interdisciplinary group of investigators devoting themselves to the study of the biochemical and physiological aspects of reproduction in men and women. It also comprises a clinical division involved in the diagnosis and treatment of the diseases of female reproduction.

The aims of the Center for Population and Family Health are more specifically relevant to the social consequences of human reproduction. The Center's community-oriented Reproduc-

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 23

tive Health Services for Women Unit, in cooperation with the division of ambulatory care of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, provides care, with emphasis on services for adolescents, to the community surrounding the Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. The Center's International Research and Technical Assistance Unit works with a number of foreign governments and with private organizations toward improved basic health and family planning services for poor people in developing countries. The Social Sciences Research Unit conducts ongoing evaluations of the Center's domestic reproductive service programs and carries out a basic research program on the causes and consequences of adolescent fertility. Finally, as a division of the School of Public Health, the Center provides academic programs leading to the M.P.H. and Dr.P.H. degrees in the fields of population/family planning, maternal and child health, and public health nutrition.

A third unit has recently been added to the Institute: the Center for Male Reproduction. The Center consists of an interdisciplinary group of basic scientists and clinicians engaged in the study and treatment of the diseases of the male reproductive system.

The offices of the Centers for Reproductive Sciences and for Male Reproduction are at 630 West 168th Street and the office for the Center for Population and Family Health is at 60 Haven Avenue, Floor B-3, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Affiliated Hospitals

The Presbyterian Hospital

Founded in 1868, the Hospital joined with the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons to form the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, which opened in 1928. Under the terms of the permanent alliance agreement with Columbia University, members of the hospital staff are appointed by the Board of Trustees of the hospital on nomination by the Trustees of the University. The Presbyterian Hospital has an overall capacity of 1,291 beds and 48 bassinets.

The Hospital includes all of the individual units described !ielow:

Presbyterian Hospital is the single largest hospital unit.

The New York Orthopaedic Hospital opened as a dispensary in 1866 largely because of the interest taken in the care of the crippled by Theodore Roosevelt, father of the president of the same name. The hospital was located in its own buildings at 420 East 59th Street until December 1950, when it was merged with the Presbyterian Hospital.

Squier Urological Clinic is the Urology Service of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Shane Hospital for Women was built at West 59th Street and Amsterdam Avenue and presented to Columbia University by Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sloane in 1886. It now is part of the Presbyterian Hospital's new Center for Women and Children.

Harkness Pavilion, erected when the Medical Center was established in 1928, is available for the accommodation of private and semiprivate patients from various services.

Babies Hospital, founded in 1887, provides for general medical and surgical care of infants and children up to their late teens, and care for premature babies. It is now part of the Center for Women and Children.

Neurological Institute, one of the first nongovernmental hospitals in the country for the treatment of diseases of the nervous system, was founded in 1909. It moved from East 67th Street to the Medical Center in 1929. The Institute includes facilities added in 1960 for psychiatric patients.

The Edward S. Harkness Eye Institute, opened in 1933, has complete facilities for the medical and surgical treatment of adults and children with diseases of the eye. On January 1, 1940, the work of the Herman Knapp Memorial Eye Hospital was taken over by the Institute.

24 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

Vanderbilt Clinic was presented to Columbia University by the Vanderbilt family in 1888 and is the outpatient department for the Presbyterian Hospital.

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital in Cooperstown, New York, is a rural hospital combining the characteristics of a university medical center with a dedication to the delivery of both primary health services to the local community and highly specialized services to a large referral area. The hospital has 186 beds and a staff of specialists who are all salaried and full time. In 1979 there were 116,764 visits to the Outpatient Department. The teaching program for house staff and students is a highly personalized one based on a team approach to medical care. Members of the staff conduct biomedical research and are interested in models for the delivery of health care to the community. The library is unusually extensive for a hospital of this size, with over 23,000 volumes and about 350 subscribed journals. Since 1947 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia, and currently about 60 students from Columbia elect programs at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital.

Harlem Hospital Center

Harlem Hospital Center, founded in 1887, is a general hospital of nearly 1,100 beds serving Central Harlem and environs, responsible for the care of approximately 400,000 people. The College of Physicians and Surgeons, through a contractual arrangement with the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, is responsible for all professional services in this hospital and nominates its entire professional staff.

This affiliation presents a unique opportunity for teaching students, interns, and residents in the traditional disciplines of medicine and provides increasing opportunities for involvement in community medicine.

The Helen Hayes Hospital

The Helen Hayes Hospital at West Haverstraw, New York, founded in 1900, is an independent rehabilitation hospital with complete medical services, owned and operated by the state through the New York State Health Department. Since 1966 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia University. The medical specialties and allied health profes- sionals are organized into disability units that provide comprehensive care through an integrated team approach, providing unique educational opportunities for residents and allied health students. The hospital has 800 admissions and 6,000 outpatient visits a year. In 1980 a new 213-bed hospital building was opened, renovation of existing research facilities was completed, work began on construction of new research quarters, and plans were completed for establishment of several major new research centers. The Hospital's long-standing program of bioengineering research now becomes the Orthopedic Engineering and Research Center; to this will be added the Regional Bone Center, Regional Arthritis Center, and Skeletal Pathology Center.

Morristown Memorial Hospital

Morristown Memorial Hospital is a regional hospital center offering comprehensive health services for the entire family. It is a voluntary, nonprofit institution with a history of community service dating back to 1892. The hospital has become a central health care facility serving Morris, Warren, Sussex, and Somerset counties, and a medical referral center for all of northwest New Jersey. Morristown Memorial is also a teaching hospital, with programs for

AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 25

medical, nursing, and technical staff. It became affiliated with the College of Physicians & Surgeons in 1979. Morristown Memorial, Overlook Hospital in Summit, and St. Barnabas Hospital in Livingston are members of the Shared Services Consortium pioneering regionalized health care services in northern New Jersey. With 689 beds, 1,700 employees, 678 nurses, a medical and dental staff of more than 400, and a full spectrum of basic and highly specialized services, Morristown Memorial combines the traditional advantages of a community hospital with the advanced capabilities of a progressive medical center. The hospital has two divisions: one where the emphasis is on acute care; the other, a center for preadmission testing, geriatric extended care, outpatient and alcoholic services, and planned facilities for subacute and rehabilitative care.

Overlook Hospital

Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey, is a 540-bed suburban community hospital, founded in 1906, which became a teaching affiliate of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1975. It is a general, voluntary, nonprofit institution accommodat- ing 20,000 inpatients and 100,000 outpatients each year. Overlook offers particularly strong training in family practice and primary care internal medicine and pediatrics through a program of broad-based clinical experience for graduate physicians. Outreach programs have been pioneered in alcoholism and other addictive illness, home-care-based hospice, and mobile intensive care utilizing paramedics.

St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

St. Luke's Hospital Center, which has included Woman's Hospital since 1953, merged with The Roosevelt Hospital in 1979, forming a Hospital Center containing 1,363 beds and serving a catchment area spanning Manhattan's west side from 34th to 134th Streets. Both hospitals had maintained teaching affiliations with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University for many years before 1971, when they each became full University hospitals. Under the terms of the affiliation with Columbia University, new members of the medical staff are appointed by the Hospital Center's Board of Trustees after they have received appointments as officers of instruction at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division

St. Luke's was established in 1850 and has been on Morningside Heights next to the main Columbia campus since 1896. It merged with Woman's Hospital in 1953, and today the hospital complex contains 780 beds, including 45 pediatric beds, 59 obstetric beds, and 50 bassinets. Approximately 24,000 patients are admitted yearly to the four major and eleven specialty services. The attending staff numbers 600 doctors; the house staff consists of 219 residents and fellows.

St. Luke's is recognized as a leader in such fields as heart surgery, kidney transplantation, artificial kidney treatments, and noninvasive diagnosis (ultrasound). The Hospital Center's clinically oriented research projects are involved in such areas as blood diseases, coronary artery disease, gastroenterology, obesity and nutrition (it is the site of the only federally funded obesity research center), pulmonary disease, renal transplant-immunology, and bioengineer- ing. A medical library of 22,000 volumes is an integral part of the Hospital Center. St. Luke's is both a major referral institution and a community hospital. The more than fifty specialty and subspecialty clinics see 50,000 patients yearly (totaling approximately 200,000 visits); the Emergency Room is one of the busiest in Manhattan, with 76,000 visits annually. The Hospital Center also operates extensive community programs in alcoholism treatment, drug detoxifica- tion, and mental health.

26 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

Roosevelt Hospital Division

The Roosevelt Hospital treated its first patient in 1871. It contains 583 beds and bassinets. There are about 217,000 outpatient and emergency-room visits annually. Approximately 19,000 patients are admitted to this hospital yearly. The hospital is engaged in many research and teaching activities. There are 159 members on the house staff. A new research building containing 52,000 square feet of laboratory space for all departments was opened in 1973. The medical library contains 17,000 volumes and subscribes to 550 medical and technical journals. The hospital is actively engaged in community programs, as represented by its Children and Youth Program and by its Drug Addiction and Alcoholism Programs and many other outreach and community services sponsored by the Departments of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, and Medicine, and the ambulatory care division.

New York State Psychiatric Institute

The Institute was built and is maintained by the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene. Through a contractual arrangement, it is affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The Institute's functions are to carry out research on the causes and treatment of psychiatric disorders and the education of those entering the mental health field. The Institute currently maintains twelve major research laboratories, a hospital, and a number of special- ized outpatient departments providing diagnostic and treatment facilities. A new thirteen-story research building is scheduled to open in late 1981.

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid

Entering classes are enrolled in the College in September of each year. The minimum requirement for admission is attendance for three full academic years at an approved college of arts and sciences. Most applicants present four academic years and a bachelor's degree, although these are not required. The composition of our entering classes indicates, however, that only a relatively small number of three-year students have been accepted in the past by our Committee on Admissions.

The college program must have included English, physics, biology, organic chemistry (including at least one semester of laboratory), and some other courses in chemistry covering at least one academic year each. These requirements have been designated as mandatory not only by our faculty but by various state medical licensure boards as well; accordingly, applicants cannot be excused from them. Courses in genetics and embryology will be useful but are not required. Students applying for admission must also have taken the Medical College Admission Test in the spring or autumn of the year of application, but only if the test scores will be sent to medical schools in the State of New York; if the scores will not be sent to this school, the requirement will be waived for all applicants. The student may have concentrated in any area in the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, or arts but evidence of a balanced education, as well as demonstrated interest and ability in the natural sciences, is preferred.

Application Procedure

Application for admission must be filed on a special form obtained from the Admissions Office of the Faculty of Medicine. Applications should be submitted as promptly as possible, though they are accepted only for the next incoming class; requests for application forms may be submitted one year in advance of registration. The completed form must be accompanied by the application fee of $25. The fee helps to cover the cost of processing the application; it is therefore not returnable and is not credited toward tuition.

Applicants will be notified when their applications have been received. The Committee on Admissions, however, evaluates only completed applications, that is, those for which letters of recommendation have been received, along with MCAT scores and transcripts. Applicants will be notified, also, when their applications have been completed; if such notification is not received within sixty days after the date of the preliminary processing of an application, applicants should make inquiries at the Admissions Office to learn which items have not yet been received. Failure to receive letters of recommendation and transcripts is the most common cause of delay in the completion of applications.

If a personal interview is required in connection with the application, it will be requested only by the Admissions Office.

Selection of Students

The Committee on Admissions devotes months to the task of selecting a class of 148 from a very large number of applicants. Obviously there will be many well-qualified students whom the College will not be able to accept. The Faculty of Medicine recognizes its obligations in the field of medical education and research not only to the local area but to the nation as well. Admission will not be offered to any applicant who has not been interviewed by one of the College's representatives. Impressions from such an interview, as well as scores on the MCAT and academic records, will be considered in selecting individuals for admission. Other selection criteria are listed below.

The Committee places great importance on the fact that the students have learned to think

28 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

for themselves, to explore, to work hard under their own initiative, to consider alternatives and make decisions, and to develop a desire for a continuous program of self-education. In the selection of students, preference is given to those who, in the opinion of the Committee on Admissions, have shown high achievement in their college education, a mature sense of values, sound motivation, qualities of leadership, and ability to assume responsibility, and to those who have already given evidence that they are qualified to complete all requirements of our curriculum and to graduate as ethical, compassionate, and competent physicians.

The practice of medicine is both a science and an art, and to treat the patient as a whole person, the doctor must be a whole person. Students planning a career in medicine should be motivated toward becoming leaders in medical thinking, rather than technicians, because medical practice is both a private enterprise and a public responsibility. The liberal arts college offers the opportunity to prepare for a happier and more useful life of citizenship. Years of specialization lie ahead in a professional career, but the foundation of all advanced study is a broad liberal education, of which science is a part.

Admission to Advanced Standing

Only a very small number of vacancies occur during the medical course, and students can be accepted on transfer from other schools only when such vacancies do arise. Any student desiring to transfer from an accredited school of medicine to the upper classes of the College should communicate with the Admissions Office to learn if a vacancy exists.

Admission of Foreign Students

Applicants need not be citizens of this country but preferably should have received their premedical education at an accredited college or university in the United States or Canada. Applications may be submitted by individuals who have been educated elsewhere, but in the past the Committee on Admissions has had great difficulty in finding a satisfactory means of evaluating the caliber of education available in the many colleges and universities throughout the world. Likewise, the Committee will accept applications for admission with advanced standing to this school from individuals who have begun their medical education in schools outside the United States and Canada, but again it has usually been able to admit relatively few individuals, either to an entering class or with advanced standing, whose previous education has not been obtained in this country or Canada.

Registration

Before attending classes, each student must register in person at the Office of the Registrar during the registration period listed in the Academic Calendar. The Office of the Registrar, on the first floor of the Black Building, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.

All students will be asked to give Social Security numbers when registering in the University. Any who do not now have a number should obtain one from their local Social Security office well in advance of registration.

Regulations

According to University regulations, each person whose registration has been completed will be considered a student of the University during the term for which he or she is registered unless the student's connection with the University is officially severed by withdrawal or otherwise. No student registered in any school or college of the University shall at the same time be registered in any other school or college, either of Columbia University or of any other

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 29

institution, without the specific authorization of the dean or director of the school or college of the University in which he or she is first registered.

The privileges of the University are not available to any student until he or she has completed registration. A student who is not officially registered for a University course may not attend the course unless granted auditing privileges (see below). No student may register after the stated period without the written consent of the appropriate dean or director.

The University reserves the right to withhold the privilege of registration or any other University privilege from any person with unpaid indebtedness to the University.

Conduct

All members of the University community, its visitors and guests, are governed by the Rules of University Conduct, which apply to all demonstrations, including rallies and picketing, that take place on or at a University facility. It is the student's responsibility to be aware of all provisions, regulations, and procedures contained in the Rules. Copies are available in the Office of the University Senate, 406 Low Memorial Library.

Attendance

Students are held accountable for absences incurred owing to late enrollment.

Religious Holidays

It is the policy of the University to respect its members' observance of their major religious holidays. Officers of administration and of instruction responsible for the scheduling of required academic activities or essential services are expected to avoid conflict with such holidays as much as possible. Such activities include examinations, registration, and various deadlines that are a part of the academic calendar.

Where scheduling conflicts prove unavoidable, no student will be penalized for absence for religious reasons, and alternative means will be sought for satisfying the academic require- ments involved. If a suitable arrangement cannot be worked out between the student and the instructor involved, students and instructors should consult the appropriate dean or director. If an additional appeal is needed, it may be taken to the Provost.

Auditing Courses

Degree candidates in good standing who are enrolled for a full-time program in the current term may audit one or two courses (except during the summer term) in any division of the University without charge by filing a formal application in the Registrar's Office (Black Building, Room 138) no later than September 12 in the autumn term and January 28 in the spring term. Applications require (a) the certification of the Registrar that the student is eligible to audit and (b) the approval of the dean of the school in which the courses are offered.

For obvious reasons, elementary language courses, studio courses, applied music courses, laboratory courses, and seminars are not open to auditors; other courses may be closed because of space limitations. In no case will an audited course appear on a student's record, nor is it possible to turn an audited course into a credit course by paying the fee after the fact. Courses previously taken for credit may not be audited.

Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute for medical students, are subject to change at any time at the discretion of the Trustees.

30 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

Beginning with the academic year 1979-1980, University charges such as tuition and fees, residence halls, and board plans may be paid at the student's convenience during the term. The full amount of any charge may be paid when due without penalty, or payment may be made in installments. If partial payments are made, a finance charge of 1 percent a month is assessed on amounts not paid by the due date shown on the monthly bill. In either event, however, the student is required to sign a Retail Installment Credit Agreement at the time of registration which sets forth the full terms and conditions of payment. All charges must be paid by the end of the term.

Tuition, the student health service fee, and the health insurance premium are payable as part of registration. (If the student chooses to pay tuition in two installments, one half of the tuition is payable at registration in September and the other half is payable in January.) If these fees are paid after the last day of registration (see the Academic Calendar), they will not be reduced, and a minimum late fee of $50 will be imposed. Checks for tuition and fees should be made payable to Columbia University.

Tuition

For the full course in medicine for one academic year (or the equivalent), payable in two instaUments $8,600.00

Health Service and Hospital Insurance Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute, are subject to change at the discretion of the Trustees. For all full-time students, per year (September 1 -August 31)

Health service fee $255.00

Hospital insurance premium 188.00

The student health service fee contributes to the cost of operating the Student Health Service. The hospital insurance fee pays the annual premium to the Associated Hospital Service of New York. Participation in these programs is compulsory for all full-time students; students who already carry hospital insurance, however, will be charged the health service fee only. Proof of comparable coverage must be shown at the time of registration. Upon payment of additional fees, students can acquire hospital insurance coverage for their dependents and the latter are eligible to receive the benefits of the health service program. Students should consult the Office of the Registrar, Black Building, Room 138, for further information on dependent coverage.

The Student Health Service, which holds daily office hours, is on the street level of Bard Haven Tower 1 (60 Haven Avenue).

Application Fees

For admission $25.00

For late application, or late renewal of application, for a degree 50.00

Late Registration Fees

Full-Time Part-Time

During late registration $ 50.00 $50.00

Up to four weeks after late registration 100.00 60.00

Four to eight weeks after late registration 150.00 70.00

Eight to twelve weeks after late registration 200.00 80.00

Beyond twelve weeks after late registration 250.00 90.00

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 31

Withdrawal and Adjustment of Fees

A student in good academic standing who is not subject to discipline will always be given an honorable dismissal if he or she wishes to withdraw from the University. Withdrawal is defined as the dropping of one's entire program in a given semester as opposed to dropping a portion of one's program.

Any student withdrawing must notify the Registrar in writing: failure to attend classes or notification of instructors does not constitute formal withdrawal and will result in failing grades in all courses. Any adjustment of the tuition that the student has paid is reckoned from the date on which the Registrar receives the student's written notification. Application fees, late fees, and special fees are not refundable.

Up to and including the second Saturday after the first day of classes, tuition will be retained in the following amount:

Full-time study $75.00

Part-time study 40.00

After the second Saturday after the first day of classes in the term, the above amount is retained, plus an additional percentage of the remaining tuition (as indicated in the schedule below), for each week, or part of a week, of the term up to the date on which the student's written notice of withdrawal is received by the Registrar.

Adjustment Schedule

Second Saturday after first

day of classes Week following second

Saturday after first day

of classes Second following week Third following week Fourth following week Fifth following week Sixth following week Seventh following week Eighth following week

Minimum Fees

Percentage of

Retained

Remaining Tuition Retained

$40 or $75

0

40 or 75

10

40 or 75

20

40 or 75

30

40 or 75

45

40 or 75

60

40 or 75

75

40 or 75

90

40 or 75

100 (no adjustment)

Application or Renewal of Application for a Degree

Degrees are awarded three times a year in October, January, and May. A candidate for any Columbia degree (except the Ph.D. degree) must file an application with the Registrar, 630 West 168th Street. In the 1981-1982 academic year, the last day to file for an October degree is August 3; for a January degree, November 6; and for a May degree, February 22. A late fee of $50 will be charged after these dates and until the expiration of the late filing period for each conferral date (September 10 for October degrees, December 11 for January degrees, April 1 for May degrees). Applications received after the late filing period will automatically be applied to the next conferral date.

If the student fails to earn the degree by the conferral date for which he or she has made application, the student may renew the application. A $50 late fee will be charged for late filing of renewals of application according to the same schedule as for original applications (see above.)

32 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

Requests for Transcripts

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 as amended prohibits the release of educational records by institutions without the specific written consent of the student or alumnus. Students or alumni may request copies of their records by writing to the Office of the Registrar, 201 Philosophy Hall, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 10027. Official copies will be sent directly by the University only to an official address such as another university, a business firm, or government agency. However students or alumni may request that unofficial copies of their transcripts (stamped "Student Copy") be sent directly to them.

There is a charge of $5 for each transcript requested singly, or $5 for the first copy and $1 for each additional copy requested at the same time. There is no charge for intrauniversity copies sent between University offices. Transcript requests are processed in the order received and require five to seven working days for processing. Specific deadlines should be mentioned, and checks accompanying requests should be made payable to Columbia University.

Estimated Expenses

Current educational expenses for a student attending the College during the first academic year are as follows:

Tuition $8,600.00

Health and Hospitalization Insurance Fees 443.00

Books and supplies 675.00

Microscope rental cost and other equipment 525.00

In addition to the educational costs listed above, each first-year student should budget approximately $5,075 to cover housing ($1,970), food ($2,130), clothing, laundry and dry cleaning ($300), and miscellaneous expenses ($675).

There are differences in the length of each academic year, and living and miscellaneous expenses vary. Each year the College Committee on Financial Aid prepares a statement of estimated expenses for students in each year of the medical school curriculum. These statements are given to all financial aid applicants at the time of distribution of the financial aid policy statement.

Microscope, Instruments, and Books

Students are required to have microscopes for courses in the first and second years of medical school. A microscope rental service is operated by the Medical Center Bookstore. For students who wish to purchase a new or used microscope, the faculty recommends a binocular instrument of standard make, complete with carrying case, built-in illuminator, and quadruple nosepiece (4X, lOX, 40X, and lOOX oil-immersion objectives).

Students are required to purchase dissection equipment for the first-year course in gross anatomy and instruments for the diagnostic examination of patients.

The books required or recommended for courses of instruction are announced at the beginning of each academic year.

Housing

Bard Hall, at 50 Haven Avenue overlooking Riverside Park and the Hudson River, is the residence for students in the College. Its facilities include lounges, a cafeteria and several dining rooms, and a gymnasium with a swimming pool, basketball and squash courts, and facilities for other sports.

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 33

Room rates at Bard Hall depend on the length of the academic year and the room assignment, information on the cafeteria service, room application forms, and other details are provided for entering students by the Admissions Office. Selected one-bedroom apartments in the Bard Haven Towers are reserved for married students. Other one-, two-, and three- bedroom apartments can be rented by groups of single students.

For further information concerning on- and off-campus housing on or near the Health Sciences Campus, write to the Assistant Director of Residence Halls, Bard Hall Office, 50 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Apartments are available for married students in Bard Haven Tower I on the Medical Center campus. Married or single students may rent apartments in Towers II and 111; the rents are higher. Information may be obtained from the Manager, Bard Haven Towers, 100 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Financial Aid

All financial aid awards are based on demonstrated need. Each year applicants for financial aid are required to borrow a sum of money (unit loan) before becoming eligible for scholarships administered by the College. Financial aid awards are intended to supplement, rather than substitute for, the student's resources and parental contributions.

The federal government makes available each year a limited number of one-year full scholarships for first-year students of Exceptional Financial Need (EFN). Funds are allocated to medical schools, who are responsible for selection of EFN recipients. Students need not request consideration for these funds directly. Awards are determined from the information provided on the financial aid application.

Upon acceptance to the College, students receive the financial aid policy statement, loan interest and repayment information, and an application form which must be completed promptly. Students enrolled in the College are informed annually about the policies for the coming academic year and the dates for submission of the financial aid application and loan applications. Further information may be obtained from the Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, telephone (212) 694-4100.

Spouses of medical students should consult the personnel offices of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and of the Presbyterian Hospital for information regarding employ- ment opportunities at the Medical Center.

Scholarships

Students are urged to determine the availability of scholarship assistance from the states in which they reside and to make application for such funds when appropriate. As an example, New York State provides funds through the Tuition Assistance Program to residents who meet financial qualifications. In addition, New York State has instituted the Special Regents Medical Scholarship, which is intended to ease the physician shortage in certain areas of the state. The Financial Aid Office provides interested students with the necessary information on applica- tions for these programs. Applicants to medical school should consult college premedical offices for information on the competitive New York State General Regents Scholarships for Professional Study of Medicine.

Among nongovernmental sources of funding there is the National Medical Fellowships, Inc., which awards fellowships to needy black Americans, American Indians, Mexican-Americans, and mainland Puerto Ricans. Applicants must be citizens of the United States or permanent residents (visa status). Awards are given to first- and second-year medical students. Enrolled medical students should apply to NMF at 250 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 before March 1 for financial assistance for the second year of medical school. Applicants to medical school should request information from NMF.

The R.G. Haddad Foundation Scholarship is available for enrolled medical students who are United States citizens of Syrian or Lebanese descent. Applicants must have verified financial

34 FINANCIAL AID

need. A grant for one year may be renewed upon application. The Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons advises students of the availability of this scholarship annually.

There are a number of scholarship funds administered by the Financial Aid Office of the College. With the exception of the Lawrence John Durante Scholarship (see below), students do not apply directly for these scholarships. The named scholarships listed below have been donated by alumni, foundations, corporations, and friends of the University.

Endowed Scholarship Funds

ALLEN Gift of Mrs. Vivian B. Allen.

ALUMNI A limited number of national scholarships. Provided by gifts from the P&S Alumni Association and other contributors.

ANONYMOUS Several; awarded annually.

BANBURY From the Banbury Scholarship Fund.

ALICE IDA AND ABRAHAM PENNER BERNHEIM SCHOLARSHIP FUND For tuition.

ISAAC J. AND REN A HENLY BERNHEIM Given by the family in honor of Isaac J. and Rena Henly Bemheim.

ELSIE J. BIRTWHISTLE Founded by the will of Morell Birtwhistle, in memory of his wife.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, JR. From the George Blumenthal, Jr., Fund.

ELIZABETH ROCK BRACKETT SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Dr. Brackett, the income to be used for scholarship assistance for women medical students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

DR. HARRY BRITENSTOOL MEMORIAL From the estate of Mrs. Blanche B. Ostheimer, in memory of her brother.

LUCIEN AND ETHEL BROWNSTONE MERIT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND A merit scholarship awarded every four years.

DR. MOSES R. BUCHMAN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students, with preference given to those who are residents of Westchester and who plan to practice pediatrics. Established by friends of Dr. Buchman.

DAVID C. BULL MEMORIAL In memory of Dr. David C. Bull, a former member of the Department of Surgery.

RICHARD BUTLER Open to men born in the state of Ohio who are qualified for admission to, and plan to enter, Columbia College, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, or the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ALONZO CLARK Founded by the will of Alonzo Clark, M.D., LL.D., for many years president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1890 Given by a member of the class.

CLASS OF 1899 Given by the class in commemoration of the thirty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1912 Given by the class on the fifteenth anniversary of its graduation.

FINANCIAL AID 35

CLASS OF 1913 For medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1920 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1924 To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of their graduation.

CLASS OF 1928 Given at their tenth reunion.

CLASS OF 1932 For a scholarship room. Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1933 For a scholarship.

CLASS OF 1934 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1936 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1937 Awarded for tuition of medical students.

CLASS OF 1938 Awarded annually to assist a student in the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1939 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1940 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1942 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1952 Given by members of the class on the tenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1953 Given by members of the class.

CLASS OF 1964 Established in memory of Dr. Howard Gerstel.

HENRY D. CRUGER Bequest of Helen Cruger, in memory of the Henry D. Cruger family.

CHARLES A. DANA FOUNDATION, Inc. Established by the Foundation.

ANTHONY M. DeANGELIS Open to a student of the fourth-year class. Given by Dr. Anthony M. DeAngelis.

HORACE DENNETT Open to students in the third- and fourth-year classes.

DAVID M. DEVENDORF Preference is given to a candidate from Herkimer County, New York, preferably one from the town of Herkimer. Given by Mrs. David M. Devendorf of Herkimer, New York, in memory of her husband, Dr. David M. Devendorf, Class of 1861.

FRANCIS E. DOUGHTY Given by Miss Phoebe Caroline Swords, in memory of Dr. Francis E. Doughty, Class of 1869.

LAWRENCE JOHN DURANTE Given by members of the Class of 1961, in memory of Lawrence John Durante. Awarded annually to a senior student with verified financial need by the Durante Scholarship Fund Committee after review of the applications of qualified students.

EDWARD PERCY EGLEE Bequest of Edward Percy Eglee, Class of 1913, member of the Faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons from 1919 until his retirement in 1953, when he was a clinical professor of medicine.

JOSEPH HERMAN AND HANNAH EICHNER Established by the will of Benjamin Bernard Eichner, Class of 1919.

JOSEPH C. FOSTER Given by Mrs. Esther J. Foster, in memory of her husband.

VIRGINIA KNEELAND FRANTZ Bequest of Dr. Frantz.

36 FINANCIAL AID

NELLIE ALDEN FRANZ Bequest of Nellie A. Franz to Columbia University for scholarships to worthy young women for undergraduate or graduate study, with preference for those interested in medicine, nursing, sociology, and journalism.

GEORGE AND CHARLIE Given by the Alumni Association of the College, in memory of George Peters and Charles Costello, long-time employees of the Medical Center.

JACOB HARSEN Given by Dr. Jacob Harsen.

FRANK HARTLEY Given by friends and colleagues of Dr. Frank Hartley, class of 1880.

WILLIAM H. HEMINGWAY

AARON HIMMELSTEIN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students. Given by Dr. Himmelstein's friends eind colleagues.

IRMA T. HIRSCHL SCHOLARSHIPS From the estate of Irma T. Hirschl. Awarded on the criteria of financial need, outstanding scholarship and dedication to medical science, the easing of pcdn and protection of life.

CHARLES EUGENE HUBER, SR. Bequest of Francis D. Huber, in memory of his father.

FRANCIS HUBER Open to a graduate of any institution other than Columbia University, City College, Barnard College, or Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

VIOLA B. HUBER Open to a graduate of Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ABRAHAM JACOBI For graduates of Columbia University and City College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber, in memory of Dr. Abraham Jacobi.

EDWARD R. JEAL Awarded to deserving students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

CHARLES CHRISTIAN LIEB Awarded to a student interested in the study of pharmacolo- gy. Given in memory of Dr. Charles Christian Lieb, Hosack Professor of Pharmacology.

LI MING Awarded with preference to students of Chinese birth or descent or nationality. Established by bequest of Mr. Li Ming.

MARJORIE McANENY Open to a graduate of Barnard College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ELIZABETH HALL McCULLOGH Given by Mrs. William G. Heaphy, in memory of her sister. Dr. Elizabeth McCullogh, an alumna of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

HERBERT D. MANLEY Given as bequest by the late Dr. Herbert D. Manley.

FRANCIS HARTMAN MARKOE Given by Madeline Shelton Markoe, in memory of her husband.

M. MONTGOMERY MAZE From the estate of M. Montgomery Maze, Pearl River, N.Y. Part of this fund may be used for scholarships and/or fellowships, preferably for graduates of the Pearl River High School.

MABEL C. MEAD Awarded to women students of Chinese ancestry. Preference given to those desiring to study medicine.

VIVIAN AND SEYMOUR MILSTEIN ENDOWMENT FOR SCHOLARSHIPS Established by the donors in honor of their friends and physicians, Drs. David Habif and Duane Todd.

SAMUEL J. MORITZ MEMORIAL Given by the executors of the estate of Samuel J. Moritz.

FINANCIAL AID 37

GULLI LINDH MULLER Bequest of the donor to be awarded with preference to a gifted woman student.

P&S SCHOLARSHIP AID AND LOAN FUND Established by the wives of the members of the Faculty of Medicine, faculty, and friends of the College.

RUDOLPH AND MARY E. PFEIFFER Given by Mrs. Mary E. Pfeiffer.

PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIP Granted with preference to sons or daughters of alumni of Presbyterian Hospital. Given by the Society of the Alumni of Presbyterian Hospital.

WILLIAM COLE RAPPLEYE Established at the retirement of Dean Rappleye.

RICHARD RHODEBECK Given by Mrs. Richard Rhodebeck, in memory of her husband.

DAVID H. ROUS From family, friends, and business associates of David H. Rous, the income to be divided equally among the Graduate School of Business, Columbia College, and the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

LOUIS AND RACHAEL RUDIN Established by the Rudin Foundation for students of excellence who would not otherwise be able to complete their education.

SAGAMORE Awarded to needy students.

JOSEPH F. SAPHIR MEMORIAL Given by Elsa M. Saphir, in memory of her husband, Joseph F. Saphir, Class of 1902.

THE MARY S. SAXE SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Mary S. Saxe.

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Given by faculty members, alumni, and students, in honor of Dr. Severinghaus's services to the College.

BERNARD E. SMITH MEMORIAL Given by Mrs. Gertrude Smith, in memory of her husband.

THE JAMES A. STEVENSON MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by Mrs. Ann Stevenson Hardesty, in memory of her brother James Albert Stevenson, Class of 1943.

EDGAR EGINTON STEWART, Jr., MEMORIAL Given by Dr. E. E. Stewart, in memory of his son.

ARTHUR PURDY STOUT MEMORIAL Given by the Arthur Purdy Stout Society.

ARNOLD STURMDORF Awarded to one or more students in their third or fourth year of medical school. Bequest of Miriam Sturmdorf.

HAROLD S. VAUGHAN Bequest of Dr. Harold Vaughan, Class of 1904.

ANDREA VICALE MEMORIAL Established by Dr. Carmine T. Vicale, in memory of his father.

HERMANN VOLLMER Established in his memory by his wife.

THEODORE L. VOSSELER Preference is given to graduates of Colgate University. Given by Dr. Allison J. Vosseler, Class of 1933, in memory of his father. Dr. Theodore L. Vosseler.

ROBERT M. WECHSLER Given by Dr. I. S. Wechsler, in memory of his son, Robert M. Wechsler, Class of 1945, and by members of the class of 1945, in memory of their classmate.

WHITING— Dr. FORDYCE B. St. JOHN SCHOLARSHIP FUND Gift by the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation, in honor of Dr. Fordyce B. St. John.

38 FINANCIAL AID

Dr. JAMES LANCELOT WILSON Awarded to a student selected by the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Gift Funds

CITIBANK MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by the Citibank. The recipient must have demonstrated need for support and he/she must be a New York State resident.

VALERIE AND GEORGE DELACORTE FOUNDATION Annual gift.

GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP GIFT FUND Gifts and memorials by various donors.

CHARLES F. IKLE SCHOLARSHIP AND RESEARCH FUND Grant by the New York Community Trust.

JAMES T. LEE FOUNDATION, Inc. Annual grant to medical students.

JULIUS E. STOLFI MEDICAL EDUCATION AND RESEARCH FUND SCHOLARSHIP

THE SULZBERGER FOUNDATION Annual gift. Awarded to senior students with very good academic records, significant financial need, and plans to pursue careers in family medicine or general internal medicine in nonurban areas.

Loans

Loans are available to all full-time medical students. These funds are provided by various sources, including the federal and state governments, the University, and also private agencies, as outlined below.

Foreign students who hold an F-1 student visa are eligible to borrow only from University funds and must have comakers who are citizens or permanent residents of the United States. Comakers should not be University employees. Foreign students may borrow from federal or state loan funds upon being granted permanent resident visa status in the United States.

Health Professions Student Loans. These are allocated by the Bureau of Health Manpower of the National Institutes of Health to individual medical schools, which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be loaned. Assuming the availability of adequate funding, the maximum loan to a student in an academic year is the cost of tuition plus $2,500. Loans are repayable to the school over a ten-year period beginning one year after completing or interrupting the prescribed full-time course of study. Interest at the annual rate of 9 percent begins to accrue when the loan becomes repayable.

Repayment of Health Professions Loans may be deferred up to three years for those who become members of a uniformed federal service on sustained full-time duty (i.e., the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Coast and Geodetic Survey), the Public Health Service, or the Peace Corps. For those pursuing advanced professional training, repayment may be deferred to completion of the training program. Interest does not accrue during period of deferment.

Health Professions Loans are forgiven or cancelled under certain conditions: (1) In the instance of students who agree to practice medicine for at least two years in a region of a state that has been determined to need additional personnel, the federal government will repay 60 percent of the outstanding principal and interest on any educational loan(s) for the cost of professional education. For a third year of practice in such an area, an additional 25 percent of the loan(s) will be repaid. (2) The outstanding loans of students who fail to complete their health professions studies will be repaid if they are in exceptionally needy circumstances, from a low-income or disadvantaged family, and cannot be expected to resume studies within two years. (3) Loans of students who die or suffer permanent and total disability will be cancelled.

FINANCIAL AID 39

National Direct Student Loans. Funds are allocated by the Office of Education to schools which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be awarded. The total (undergraduate and graduate school loans) available to a student from the NDSL program is $12,000. The current interest rate, payable during the repayment period, is 5 percent on the unpaid principal. Repayment begins six months after graduation or after leaving school. The repayment period may extend up to ten years. Repayment may be deferred for up to three years during active U.S. military service, during service in the Peace Corps or Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), or for up to two years during service in an internship required to begin professional practice.

Federal and State Guaranteed Loans. Under the auspices of the Bureau of Student Financial Assistance of the Department of Education, federally insured loans are made by authorized beinks, savings-and-loan associations, credit unions, pension funds, and insurance companies. The maximum loan each academic year under this program is $5,000, and the total outstanding loan balance at any one time may not exceed $25,000. Lending institutions participating in this program can provide information regarding interest rates, repayment, and deferment of repayment.

University loan funds are also intended to supplement students' resources when monies are available. Included among these are the following funds:

PETER AMAZON Bequest of Peter Amazon.

LEONARD ALEXANDER ARMS Bequest of Lydia B. Arms, in memory of her husband, to create a revolving loan fund for scholarship and research to medical students and graduate students at P&S.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, Jr. Used for the assistance of needy students in the medical school.

CLASS OF 1906 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1906.

CLASS OF 1919 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1919. To be used for loans to deserving students.

CAROL ELISSA GARDNER Established by Dr. M. Jordan Thorstad, in memory of his wife. Dr. Ccirol Elissa Gardner Thorstad, Class of 1941.

DAVID GREENE A bequest from the estate of Fcinnye Greene Meyerson, in honor of her brother. Dr. David Greene. Used for assistance of needy students in the medical school and Columbia College.

GEORGE L. HAWKINS, Jr. Gift of George L. Hawkins, Jr., Class of 1941.

B. H. HOMAN, JR., REVOLVING LOAN FUND Long-term, low-interest loans for needy students.

ROBERT ABBE MACKENZIE Established by friends, colleagues, and patients of Dr. MacKenzie, an alumnus of the Class of 1921.

GEORGE W. MERCK MEMORIAL Established by the Merck Company Foundation in honor of George W. Merck. For graduates of P&S, wherever they are in training, or to graduates of other medical schools in training at hospitals affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

JESSIE SMITH NOYES

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Established by the Clark Foundation as an unrestricted, discretionary fund to be used primarily for the support of students and student activities. Priority given to fourth-year students who are subjected to increased living and transportation

40 FINANCIAL AID

costs because of electing clerkships at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, N.Y.

WALTER C. AND MARJORIE C. STEIN Bequest of Marjorie C. Stein.

STEINHARDT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Bequest of Samuel C. Steinhardt. Awarded to graduates of one of the colleges of the City University of New York who have attended public schools exclusively (except for religious instruction). To be repaid in fifteen years; without interest for the first ten years; with 5 percent annual interest thereafter on the unpaid balance.

In addition to the foregoing, periodically there are funds for short-term emergency loans, which are administered through the Financial Aid Office of the medical school.

Prizes

Dr. HARRY S. ALTMAN PRIZE Awarded to an outstanding senior student who demon- strates a special interest in pediatric ambulatory care. Established to honor Dr. Harry S. Altman, in recognition of his outstanding contributions to scholarship in pediatrics.

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AWARD Given for outstanding achievement.

HERBERT J. BARTELSTONE AWARD IN PHARMACOLOGY Awarded to a member of the graduating class of the College who has demonstrated exceptional accomplishments in pharmacology. Established to honor the memory of Professor Herbert J. Bartelstone, member of the Department of Pharmacology from 1950 until 1973, dedicated and inspiring teacher, and uncompromising advocate of the importance of rigorous preparation in basic medical science in the education of the physician.

COAKLEY MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Otolaryngology to a senior student who has done outstanding work in the field.

TITUS MUNSON COAN PRIZE Awarded to the senior student who has submitted the best essay in biological science or otherwise best contributed to its advancement. Bequest of Titus M. Coan.

THOMAS F. COCK, M.D., PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for excellence in obstetrics and gynecology.

FREDERICK PARKER GAY MEMORIAL AWARD Awarded to the senior student whose work in microbiology is judged the most outstanding. Given by Mrs. Frederick Parker Gay, in memory of her husband.

JANEWAY PRIZE Awarded to the student graduating from the College with the highest marks for efficiency and ability. Given by the bequest of Matilda S. J. Wisner.

Dr. HAROLD LAMPORT BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for the best thesis reporting original biomedical research. Gift of the Lamport Foundation.

ROBERT F. LOEB AWARD Awarded to a senior student who, in the opinion of the Department of Medicine, has shown the greatest promise of excellence in clinical medicine. Established in memory of Dr. Robert F. Loeb, Bard Professor of Medicine, and chairman of the Department of Medicine from 1947 to 1959.

F. PHILIP LOWENFISH PRIZE IN DERMATOLOGY Awarded to the individual who has done the most creative and original research in dermatology. Given by Mrs. Lowenfish, in her husband's memory.

EDITH AND DENTON McKANE MEMORIAL AWARD Bequest of Edith U. McKane. Awarded to a senior student for excellence in basic or clinical research in ophthalmology.

FINANCIAL AID STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES 41

Dr. HAROLD LEE MEIERHOF MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded on recommendation of the professor of pathology to the student who has done the best work in the field during the four years of medical school. Given by the parents of Dr. Harold Lee Meierhof, Class of 1917.

NEW YORK ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL AWARD An annual prize awarded to a senior student upon nomination by the Department of Orthopedic Surgery, for outstanding perfor- mance in the field.

JOSEPH GARRISON PARKER AWARD Awarded to the senior in the College who best exemplifies, through a continued personal interest and activities in art, music, literature, or the public interest, the fact that Living and Learning go on together. Given by Dr. and Mrs. Philip Parker, in memory of their son, Joseph, Class of 1948, whose promising career in medicine was cut short by death in 1953, but in whose life the love of music and the arts was a constant source of inspiration.

P&S CLASS OF 1924, Dr. ALLEN O. WHIPPLE MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded to a senior student, upon nomination of the Department of Surgery, for outstanding performance in the field.

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Psychiatry to a second-year student for the best work in psychopathology.

SAMUEL W. ROVER AND LEWIS ROVER AWARD An annual prize to be awarded to a graduating medical student or a male graduate student for scholarship and outstanding achievement in biochemistry at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ANN RYAN PRIZE IN BIOCHEMISTRY To be awarded to deserving women graduate students.

HELEN M. SCIARRA PRIZE Awarded to a senior student in the College for outstanding work in neurology.

Dr. ALFRED STEINER AWARD Presented annually to one or more students chosen by a faculty committee on the basis of achievement in medical research. Funded by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in honor of Dr. Steiner.

Dr. HAROLD B. STEVELMAN AWARD Awarded to a senior student for excellence in adult cardiology. In honor of Dr. Harold Stevelman, Class of 1958, in appreciation of his service to the family of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert.

UROLOGY PRIZES Awarded to senior students for the best essays on urological subjects.

Dr. WILLIAM PERRY WATSON PRIZE IN PEDIATRICS Awarded on the nomination of the professor of pediatrics to that member of the graduating class of the College who has shown the most notable work in the study of the diseases of infants and children.

Dr. WILLIAM RAYNER WATSON AWARD Awarded to that member of the graduating class who has done the most outstanding work in psychiatry during the four years of attendance at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

SIGMUND L. WILENS PRIZE Awarded to a member of the graduating class who, in the opinion of the Department of Pathology, has been distinguished by special excellence in pathology. Gift of Dr. Marie Renate Dische Wilens, in memory of her husband. Dr. Sigmund L. Wilens.

Student and Alumni Activities

All students enrolled in the College enjoy the privileges and facilities of the University campus, including the University libraries.

42 STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES

P&S Club

The P&S Club was founded over eighty years ago by John R. Mott, who later won the Nobel Peace Prize. The Club is the most active and comprehensive student organization in Americein medical education today. All matriculated students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are members, eligible to participate in extracurricular activities of their choice. Under the guidance of the Faculty Advisory Board, the student cabinet, led by the president, assumes the entire responsibility for management of the Club. The cabinet consists of four elected members from each class and those who chair the following committees: Orientation, Handbook, Student-Faculty Home Visits, Films, Concerts, Choral Society, Bard Hall Players, Fine Arts, Athletics, Community Youth Work, Accessories, Social, and Columbia-Presbyterian Mediccil Society.

Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society

A chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha, the national honor medical society, was founded at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1907. Students are elected to membership in the senior year by a committee of the faculty appointed by the Dean. The committee is chaired by the Alpha Omega Alpha Councilor of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Student member- ship is determined according to the constitution of the national society. Election is limited to those whose scholastic qualifications place them in the upper 25 percent of the class. The number of student members elected from any class may not exceed one-sixth of the number expected to graduate in that class. Although scholastic excellence is required for membership, integrity, capacity for leadership, compassion, and fairness in dealing with one's colleagues are judged to be of equal significance.

P&S Alumni Association

The P&S Alumni Relations Office serves to foster and maintain cordial relationships between the College of Physicians and Surgeons and its alumni, and is responsible for alumni relations programming and alumni annual fund raising projects.

Regular members of the Alumni Association include all those awarded the M.D. or Med.Sc.D. degrees from the College as well as those awarded the Certificate in Psychoanalytic Medicine. Associate members include faculty members of the College, all house staff members and visiting fellows at hospitals affiliated with P&S, and all Ph.D. graduates of the Basic Sciences Curricula.

The work of the Alumni Association is accomplished through the efforts of its officers and the sixteen standing and ad hoc committees, all of whom form the constituency of the P&S Alumni Council. Members are encouraged to participate in the work and activities sponsored by the Association. Liaison with the College is facilitated through the office of the Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs. Among the important functions of the Association is participation in the publication of P&S, a magazine cosponsored by the alumni and the medical school. This publication serves as a major form of communication between the school and its alumni, the faculty, the students and their parents, and other friends and associates of the College.

Restricted revenues raised by the Alumni Association provide funds for endowed scholar- ships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and toward the endowment of a P&S Alumni Association professorship. Unrestricted revenues raised by the Association allow the College flexibility in applying funds to areas of greatest need. Routinely, a substantial stipend from unrestricted revenues goes to the P&S Club.

As future alumni, students play an important role in the work and deliberations of the Alumni Association. As members of the Student-Alumni Relations Committee, students and alumni work together in addressing students' current needs and seeking solutions to their problems.

Information about the Alumni Association and its activities is avciilable from the P&S Alumni Relations Office, 2005-C, Black Building, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032. Telephone: (212) 694-3498.

The Program of Instruction

The first-year curriculum is largely devoted to basic science courses with correlation clinics to demonstrate the application of scientific information to the practice of medicine. The first-year student also studies the impact of health care systems in our current society on the individual patient and physician. Second-year courses concentrate on the clinical relevance of basic science concepts as the bridging process to clinical instruction begins. Correlations between pathology and pathophysiology are emphasized. The development of basic clinical skills begins in the second semester and culminates in a four-week clerkship. Throughout both preclinical years elective opportunities are available for pursuit of areas of interest.

The major clinical year is devoted exclusively to rotations on clerkships in the clinical disciplines. Under close supervision the students are helped to develop the skills and knowledge required for the practice of clinical medicine. Students learn to elicit a comprehen- sive history and to carry out a complete physical examination. They learn to develop professional relationships with patients, and they acquire an understanding of the mechanisms of disease and of the principles necessary for valid diagnostic appraisal and effective therapeutic plans.

All courses of the first three years of the curriculum are required of all students. In the fourth year, with the guidance of faculty advisers, students design individual elective curricula, drawn from a wide range of basic scientific electives, clinical electives, and research programs offered by the faculty. Each fourth-year student is required to take a one-month elective in ambulatory care which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. The elective courses of all departments are described in a catalog which is printed annually and distributed to students and faculty. Students are permitted to spend three months of the curriculum in elective programs offered by other medical schools. In addition, the School of Public Health offers international medicine programs that provide opportunities to study the orgeinization and delivery of health services in many countries of the world.

During the elective curriculum students have available the resources of the entire University. Students are encouraged to utilize elective curriculum time to reach career decisions. Faculty advisers stress the acquisition of knowledge and skills in areas of medicine apart from the student's career discipline, and they encourage students to gain experience in clinical and/or laboratory research.

The College reserves the right to make changes in the program of studies and courses of instruction at any time.

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence

All courses are rated on an Honors-Pass-Fail system and these ratings only are recorded on the official transcripts. Students are not ranked within the class. Faculty provide narrative descriptions of student performances in preclinical courses (Abnormal Human Biology, Introduction to the Patient, and Psychiatric Medicine I and II), major clinical year clerkships, and elective programs. These evaluations become part of the student's permanent academic record in the Office of the Dean.

There are three standing faculty committees concerned with students' academic perfor- mances. These committees are: the First Year Class Faculty, the Second Year Class Faculty, and the Clinical Committee. The latter deals with academic performances in the major clinical year and the elective curriculum. The standing committees meet during each academic year to review student performances and to make decisions related to course failures and to promotions. Course failures in all years of the curriculum must be corrected according to the directives of the faculty committees. A student may be advanced to the next academic year of the medical school curriculum only upon recommendation of the faculty committee. In any year of the curriculum students may be dismissed for poor scholarship. Repetition of a year of the curriculum may be recommended by a faculty committee. The faculty committees may

44 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

direct students whose performances are marginal to undertake additional work to correct deficiencies and strengthen overall performance in any discipline.

Students are informed in writing of the academic decisions of all faculty committees. Students have the right to appeal decisions of the faculty committees. A student who wishes to appeal may request the concerned committee to reverse or alter a decision. If the committee reaffirms the original decision, the student may direct an appeal to the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, who may refer the appeal to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Council for finail decision.

The Faculty of Medicine reserves the right to dismiss, or to deny admission, registration, readmission, or graduation to any student who in the judgment of the Faculty of Medicine is determined to be unsuited for the study or practice of medicine.

Students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are required to pass National Board examinations Parts I and II prior to graduation.

Leaves of absence may be granted by the Dean for a limited period of time in exceptional circumstances only for health reasons or personal emergencies.

Key to Course Numbers

Medical Center courses: The suffixes F and S refer to first- and second-year courses, respectively. Numbers without a suffix indicate major clinical year clerkships that are repeated throughout the year in instruction periods of twelve weeks or less.

Summary of Curriculum (for students entering in September 1981)

First Year

SEPTEMBER 8, 1981, to JANUARY 15, 1982. First semester. JANUARY 18, 1982, to JUNE 10, 1982. Second semester.

Second Year

SEPTEMBER 1, 1982, through MAY 31, 1983.

Third and Fourth Years

JULY 1, 1983, through APRIL 30, 1985.

Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses of the First and Second Years

Abnormal Human Biology lOlS.

Dr. Canfield and interdepartmental associates: Cardiology, Dr. Drusin; Pulmo- nary, Dr. Harvey; Endocrinology-Metabolism, Dr. Holub; Gastroenterology, Dr. Glickman; Hematology, Dr. Rifkind; Immunology, Dr. Butler; Infectious Diseases, D;. Neu; Oncology, Dr. Weinstein; Nephrology, Dr. Al-Awqati; Surgery, Dr. Lo- Gerfo.

Exercises in the application and correlation of the basic sciences to a broad range of clinical problems. Teaching is by seminar/lecture and is closely integrated with courses in pathology, pharmacology, and introductory medicine.

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 45

Anatomy lOlF. Microscopic anatomy Dr. Nunez and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies of structure in relation to function.

Anatomy 102F. Human anatomy

Drs. April, Moss, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory encompassing basic morphological and functional human anato- my.

Anatomy 103F. Developmental anatomy Dr. Pfenninger and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and laboratory emphasizing the fundamental processes of embryogenesis; closely integrated with Anatomy 1 OIF-Microscopic anatomy.

Biochemistry lOlF. Introductory biochemistry Dr. Gold and departmental staff.

Lectures and conferences stressing principles of biochemistry and their relationship to disease processes.

Genetics lOlS. Introductory clinical genetics Dr. Bloom and associates.

Lectures emphasizing general principles of genetics and their clinical application.

Medicine lOlS. Introduction to the practice of medicine Drs. Ccmfield, Marcus, and associates.

Lectures, conferences, and seminars addressing ethical and personeil issues relevant to the practice of medicine.

Medicine 102S. Introduction to the patient Dr. Morris and associates.

A series of interdepartmental presentations and demonstrations followed by an intensive four-week preceptorship (at Harlem, Overlook, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital) during which the student will learn to take a comprehensive medical history and to perform a complete physical examination.

Microbiology lOlF. General microbiology Drs. Erlanger, Ginsberg, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory covering the basic principles of cell regulation, immunology, virology, and the biology of pathogenic organisms.

Anatomy-Physiology 106S. Neural science

Drs. Kandel, Kelly, Kupfermann, Rowland, Schwartz, and Spencer.

Lectures, seminars, laboratories, and clinical demonstrations to provide an integrated understanding of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, biochemistry, and behavior.

Nutrition lOlF. Introduction to nutrition Dr. Winick and associates.

Lectures that define the elements of nutrition essential for good health.

Pathology lOlF. General pathology Dr. C. Fenoglio and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory emphasizing the mechanisms of injury and repair in cells, tissues, and organ systems.

Pathology 102S. Systemic pathology

Drs. Branwood, C. Fenoglio, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies to elucidate the pathogenesis of findings in disease.

Pathology 103S. Neuropathology Dr. Duffy and associates.

Lectures, demonstrations, and microscopic studies of diseases of the nervous system.

46 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Pharmacology lOlS. General and special pharmacology Dr. Kahn and departmental staff.

Lectures, seminars, and demonstrations to elucidate the basic principles essential for the effective use of drugs as therapeutic or diagnostic agents.

Medicine 105F. Physician-patient relationship Dr. Park and associates.

Preceptor sessions emphasizing the central role of the physician-patient relationship in the practice of medicine and the importance of the effects of health care organization and other factors on that relationship.

Physiology 101 F. Human physiology Dr. Nocenti and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and conferences to define the function of specific cells, tissues, and organs and their homeostatic mechanisms.

Psychiatry lOlF. Psychiatric Medicine, 1 Dr. Arkow and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars presenting the salient features of normal development.

Psychiatry 102S. Psychiatric Medicine, II Dr. Arkow and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars covering the major mental illnesses and the elements of patient interviewing.

Public Health 101 F. Structure of health care systems Dr. Rosenberg and associates.

Lectures and seminar groups on the current organization of health care.

Public Health 102F. Epidemiology Dr. Rush and associates.

Lectures and seminars to present epidemiological principles.

Public Health 103F. Biostatistics Dr. Fleiss and associates.

Lectures on the basic elements of biostatistics applicable to medicine.

Public Health 104F. Parasitic diseases Dr. Despommier and associates.

Lectures and laboratories stressing parasitic diseases likely to be encountered and the techniques necessary for the diagnosis of these diseases.

Major Clinical Year

Anesthesiology 201. Clinical clerkship in anesthesiology Dr. Bendixen and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship that provides training in preanesthetic evaluation, management, and postanesthetic care of surgical patients. At the conclusion of the clerkship students should be able to do the following: (1) describe the major factors to be considered in selecting anesthetic drugs and techniques for patients undergoing common surgical procedures; (2) describe indications for positive pressure ventilation of the lungs and how the adequacy of such ventilation can be determined; (3) differentiate between a patent and obstructed airway in a patient and demonstrate on a patient or mannikin his/her ability to obteiin a patent airway by positioning; (4) describe the indications for use of an endotracheal tube; (5) describe procedures used for resuscitation of a patient who has had cardiac arrest and demonstrate on a mannikin his/her ability to perform mouth-to-mouth ventilation and closed chest cardiac massage; (6) describe indications for and contraindications to the use of local anesthetics to provide infiltration and nerve block anesthesia; and (7) describe the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of local anesthetic drug toxicity.

Dermatology 201. Dr. Harber and staff.

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 47

Medicine 201. Clinical clerkship in medicine

Dr. Loeb and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's

Hospitals.

Extended clinical experience under a preceptorship system at Presbyterian Hospital and at another affiliated hospital, Harlem, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital. At the conclusion of the clerkship the student should be capable of taking a precise medical history, performing em accurate physical examination, interpreting basic laboratory data, formulating a cogent problem list, and communicating these data in accurate verbal and written form. These skills will be acquired in the patient care setting in order to increase the student's understanding of the physiologic, psychologic, and social aspects of medicine and to prepare the student for the assumption of clinical responsibility under close supervision.

Neurology 201. Clinical clerkship in neurology

Dr. Rowland and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospitcd.

A comprehensive experience in clinical neurology provided at the bedside at the Neurological Institute. Under close supervision of a junior and senior resident and an attending physician in neurology, students learn to obtain a systematic neurological history and to perform and interpret the neurological examination. By active participation in the evaluation and care of patients, expertise is obtained in the diagnosis and treatment of common neurological diseases. Students learn how to do a lumbar puncture and they become familiar with electrodiagnostic and neuroradiologiceil tests. Experience is also obtained in neurosurgery and rehabilitation medicine. Management of neurological emergencies is learned during night call with the senior resident. In addition, a comprehensive core knowledge of clinical neurology is ensured by a course syllabus, daily rounds, and preceptor sessions with the attending physician.

Neurology 202. Neurosurgery

Dr. Stein and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Obstetrics and Gynecology 201. Clinical clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology Dr. Vande Wiele and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology under close supervision of house staff and attendings. On the gynecological wards and in the clinics the student learns to take a sexual and gynecological history, to examine the breasts, abdomen, and pelvis, to distinguish normal and abnormal findings relative to gynecological disease, and to diagnose and manage benign and malignant gynecologic tumors. The student acquires the skills needed to approach problems of sexuality and an understanding of the impact of changing physiological states in menarche and menopause. On the obstetrical service the student learns the medical and surgical complications encountered during pregnancy and delivery, and the student learns to diagnose and manage pregnancy. The student participates in the conduct of labor, the delivery, and the care of the newborn.

Ophthcdmology 201. Clinical clerkship in ophthalmology Dr. Campbell and staff.

Orthopedic Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in orthopedic surgery Dr. Garcia and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

On the orthopedic surgery clerkship students learn to perform an orthopedic physical examination and to take an orthopedic history from a patient. The clerkship provides students with insight into the more common musculoskeletal problems (including fractures and trauma) and the basic approaches to management of these problems by an orthopedic surgeon. The student is expected to gain insight into how the discipline of orthopedic surgery works in conjunction with other specialties and how an orthopedic service provides in-patient and out-patient care.

Otolaryngology 201. Clinical clerkship in otolaryngology Dr. Abramson and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship designed to teach the skills of physical examination of the ear, nose, and throat and to provide an understanding of certain diseases where this examination is crucial in diagnosis and management. The clerkship includes selected didactic lectures, followed by a preceptor-type experience in the clinic where students examine and work up a number of patients under the direct supervision of a faculty member.

48 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Pediatrics 201. Clinical clerkship in pediatrics

Dr. Katz and staff at the Babies Hospital (Presbyterian), Harlem, Roosevelt, and

St. Luke's Hospitals.

A clinical clerkship providing both in-patient and ambulatory care experience. The student is introduced to the study of infants and children: growth and development, diseases, and health care maintenance. The student develops basic skills in the following areas: taking the pediatric history from the parents and from the older child; performing the physical examination of the pediatric patient, including the young infant; observing, analyzing, and recording the interaction between parent and child; and ordering and interpreting laboratory tests. The student learns to integrate the data acquired and formulate an appropriate problem list and plan for the patient. The student also learns to make the basic measurements of physical, neurological, cind psychosocial growth and development, and to plot and assess the data.

Psychiatry 201. Clinical clerkship in psychiatry

Dr. Malitz and staff at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Harlem, Presby- terian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in psychiatry. In active participation in patient care under faculty supervision the student is expected to learn to conduct a psychiatric history and menteJ status examination and to develop refined interviewing skills, noting verbal and nonverbal behavior. The student learns to make a psychiatric differential diagnosis, to use psychotropic drugs effectively, to evaluate suicide potential, and to develop and enhance therapeutic rapport. The clerkship aims to provide an appreciation of the effects of psychological, social, and biological phenomena on illness-related behaviors.

Radiology 201. Diagnostic radiology (medical) Dr. Se<mian and staff.

Radiology 202. Diagnostic radiology (surgical) Dr. Seaman and staff.

Rehabilitation Medicine 201.

Dr. Downey and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in surgery

Dr. Reemtsma and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A comprehensive clinical clerkship during which the student is expected to demonstrate improvement in ability to perform histories and physical examinations on surgical patients and to formulate rational diagnostic and therapeutic plans. The student is expected to demonstrate increasing skill cind competence in performing selected procedures, in assuming supervised responsibility for patient care, in communicat- ing succinctly and with clarity to patients and colleagues, and in building a functional body of critically examined information regarding common surgical entities.

Surgery 202. Lectures and demonstrations in surgical pathology Drs. C. Fenoglio, Lane, and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Surgery 201.

Urology 201. Clinical clerkship in urology Dr. Olsson and staff.

During the clinical clerkship in urology students learn to identify common disorders of the genito-urinary tract through precise patient interviews and examinations. Both ambulatory and in-patients are evaluated. By knowing diagnostic methods unique to urology, students are able to formulate appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic plans.

Fourth Year

Interdepartment 301. Ambulatory care /public health selective Dr. C. Neu, course coordinator.

Each student in the fourth year is required to select an elective in ambulatory care, which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. (For the rest of the Fourth Year see page 43 and the elective catalogue.)

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 49

Special Programs

M.D.-Ph.D. Program

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences have formed a cooperative program leading to both the M.D. and Ph.D. degrees. This program is supervised by the Graduate Biomedical Sciences Advisory Committee and permits medical students who have a serious interest in basic biomedical research to obtain the Ph.D. degree in one of the fourteen participating disciplines in the program. At least two additional years of study beyond the four required for the M.D. degree should be anticipated for completion of this program. The program is supported by traineeships from the National Institutes of Health.

Applicants interested in the M.D.-Ph.D. program should write for further information and application forms to:

Dr. David Schachter

Chairman, Graduate Biomedical Sciences

Advisory Committee Department of Physiology 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

They should, moreover, make separate, concurrent application for admission to the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Joint M.D./M.P.H. Program

This dual degree program is under the joint direction of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the School of Public Health. In addition to preclinical and clinical medical training, students gain substantive knowledge of the health care delivery system and the technological, social, and political forces that contribute to the problems and patterns of illness, medical care, and delivery of services. They also develop concrete skills of research or administration applicable in interdisciplinary health service settings, both clinical and commu- nity based.

Before being considered for admission to the joint degree program, the applicant must first be accepted as a degree candidate in the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Formal application to the School of Public Health may then be made at any time before the student enters the fourth year of medical training. The overall length of the joint program, registration, and scheduling patterns differ for individual students. The total elapsed time could be as short as four years, but might extend beyond the four-year graduation date of the medical school. In general, during the first three years the joint degree student uses vacation and free time in the medical schedule to cross-register for public health courses. In the fourth year the student registers concurrently in the two schools, permitting opportunities to complete core, track, and elective public health courses and also carry the required clinical elective work in the medical curriculum. The M.D. and the M.P.H. degrees may be awarded simultaneously at the end of the fourth year; either degree may be awarded separately when the requirements have been met.

For further information, consult the Dean's Office in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y., 10032, or the Dean's Office in the School of Public Health, 600 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

50 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Programs in Physical TFierapy and Occupational Therapy

Educational programs are offered by the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine to students who have already earned a bachelor's degree. They may apply for admission to a two-year program leading to the Master of Science degree in physical therapy or occupational therapy, or a second professional Master of Science degree in occupational therapy education or occupational therapy administration. Details are given in the bulletin of Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy.

Program of the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

A course of training in the theory and practice of psychoanalytic medicine is offered through the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research of the Department of Psychiatry. The program, a minimum of four years in length, leads to the award of a certificate in Psychoanalysis. For details, see the bulletin of the Center (formerly the Psychoanalytic Clinic).

Programs in Nutrition

The Master of Science program, administered by the Postgraduate Division of the Faculty of Medicine, is a twelve-month program that serves as a foundation for students who plan to continue for the Doctor of Philosophy degree or to attend a professional school in the health sciences. In addition, the master's program is offered to physicians and other health specialists who wish to augment their training with a knowledge of nutrition.

Requirements for admission: a bachelor's degree from an accredited college, with a strong emphasis on the sciences, including two years of chemistry, one year of biology, and a course in elementary biochemistry. The Graduate Record Examination is required.

Under the jurisdiction of the Executive Committee on Graduate Instruction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, students may follow a program of studies leading to the Ph.D. degree. Course work and thesis research in nutritional biochemistry and in clinical and public health nutrition are carried out under the guidance of the DoctorcJ Program subcommittee on Nutrition.

Requirements for admission: successful completion of the Master of Science degree program as outlined above, or its equivalent, and demonstrated scholarly ability in pursuing advanced studies and research. In addition, students must fulfill the general requirements for the degree which govern all Ph.D. candidates in the University.

A program of postdoctoral training in nutrition is offered for qualified individueds having the degree of Doctor of Medicine or the degree of Doctor of Philosophy who intend to pursue careers in teaching and research in nutrition. The program includes clinics, selected nutrition courses, seminars, and participation in research projects, with a view to qualifying the individual for teaching in medical schools or in nutrition departments of graduate schools. Specific training is given in the areas of nutrition and development, prenatal growth, obesity, endocrinology, and nutrition and metabolism. This program has considerable flexibility and is arranged with the individual to suit his or her particular goals and needs.

Inquiries concerning the above programs may be directed to the Office of the Director, Institute of Human Nutrition, 701 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Clinical Genetics

While patient services in genetics are rendered through the existing clinical departments of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the teaching, research, and clinical services in genetics

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 51

are coordinated and integrated by the Program in Clinical Genetics, under the chairmanship of Dr. Arthur Bloom, Professor of Pediatrics and of Human Genetics and Development. The membership of this committee includes physicians and scientists from the Department of Human Genetics and Development and from numerous other departments of the College.

The Program in Clinical Genetics offers fellowships in genetics and training in the genetic aspects of a wide range of medical and surgical specialties. The Program provides postgrad- uate clinical teaching, elective courses for medical students, and regular conferences on clinical genetics. The clinical and laboratory facilities of the Presbyterian Hospital, Babies Hospital, and other affiliated hospitals are all utilized in the Program, and the research laboratories of the Department of Human Genetics and Development actively participate in it.

Interested applicants should write for further information to the Chairman, Program in Clinical Genetics, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry

The program of study in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, which leads to the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, is under the jurisdiction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Information about admission and degree requirements and courses of instruction is given in the bulletin of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship

Through the kindness of generous donors, the resources of the Faculty of Medicine include several distinguished lectureships and a visiting professorship:

The Cartwright Lecture Fund, established under the will of Benjamin Cartwright, made possible biennial lectures under the sponsorship of the P&S Alumni Association during the period 1881-1912. A new series of Cartwright Lectures was inaugurated under the College's auspices in November 1974.

The Alexander Ming Fisher Lectures were established under the terms of the will of Dr. A. M. Fisher's half-brother, E. Douglas Southwick, to make possible lectures on the general theme of Death and Dying.

The Michael Heidelberger Lectures were begun in 1955 to honor the notable contributions of Dr. Heidelberger, now Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry, and to stimulate further scientific progress in immunochemistry and related disciplines.

The David Seegal Lectureship and Visiting Professorship Fund, given by the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society and others, provides for the appointment of a visiting professor who is in residence for five days. During this time he or she delivers the David Seegal Lecture on Chronic Disease.

Prizes and Awards

The Distinguished Service Award of the College of Physicians and Surgeons is given annually at Commencement exercises to a member of the faculty for outstanding contributions to medicine.

The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, the recipient of which traditionally gives a public lecture, was established under the will of the late S. Gross Horwitz in honor of his mother and is given annually in recognition of outstanding basic research in the fields of biology or biochemistry.

52 PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

The Joseph Mather Smith Prize is awarded to the graduate of the College whose original research in medical subjects is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be the most meritorious.

The Stevens Triennial Prize is awarded to the person, not necessarily a graduate of the College, whose original research on any medical subject is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be most meritorious.

Postgraduate Programs

Opportunities for continuing medical education beyond the M.D. degree are offered at the College of Physicians and Surgeons through three major programs: (1) the training of specialists by means of hospital residencies; (2) special courses in general medicine and in the specialties, for practicing physicians and physicians in training who wish to renew and continue their educational experiences in the various fields of medicine; and (3) the Doctor of Medical Science Program, for physicians with particular interest and competence in research in the basic sciences. Further information about these programs may be obtained from the Office of the Deem of the Faculty of Medicine.

Graduate Training of Specialists

The program offers training opportunities through fellowships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and residencies at affiliated hospitals for holders of the M.D. degree. Proper training for specialization includes four major elements. First, it provides a comprehensive clinical experience as a resident in a hospital that is equipped and staffed to provide graded responsibilities under the supervision of experts in the selected specialty. Second, it disciplines the resident in scientific attitudes toward health and disease and enriches the clinical experience through advanced training in those medical sciences that are largely concerned with the resident's specialty. Third, it enables the resident to see and to begin to understand the effect of illness on the individual patient and the response of that person to the illness and to the physician. The relationships that the resident physician develops with individual patients set the pattern for his or her participation in the delivery of health care after the completion of the residency. Finally, it gives the student the opportunity, either as a resident or as a fellow, to do basic or clinical research. This, in turn, may stimulate the type of creative productivity that may earn the student a recommendation for admission to a program leading to the award of the Doctor of Medical Science degree.

Postgraduate Courses for Practicing Physicians and Specialists

A variety of short courses have been organized at hospitals and clinics affiliated with the University; they are available at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and at the other affiliated hospitals. No University credit or certificates are granted for these courses, but continuing medical education credit is granted through the Physicians Recognition Award of the American Medical Association.

Courses for the general practitioner furnish opportunities to keep abreast of new knowledge and the latest methods of diagnosis, treatment, and prevention; and to learn the indications, limitations, and value of those technical procedures that require the attention of a qualified specialist. The instruction consists largely of first-hand clinical experience, lectures, demonstra- tions, and discussion.

For those already practicing a specialty, advanced instruction is given in the therapeutic and diagnostic methods of certain limited fields of practice. Enrollment is limited to those who have the preparation necessary to enable them to benefit by the advanced instruction.

Program for the Doctor of Medical Science Degree

The University confers the Med.Sc.D. degree upon a few physicians who have completed a research project in one of the basic science fields. Only staff members of the Columbia-

54 POSTGRADUATE PROGRAMS

Presbyterian Medical Center are eligible for this degree. A minimum of two years of full-time work in the basic science field is required. Additional requirements include completion of a significant and original research project, the passing of comprehensive and oral examinations and submission of a dissertation.

Departments of Instruction

Listed are only those faculty appointments and promotions approved by September 1, 1981.

The designation "also" is used with the name of an individual holding a joint appointment in two departments. The designation "in" is used when an individual holds an appointment in the department where listed, with assignment to the department named after the "in." In either case, the name appears in both departmental lists.

Anatomy and Cell Biology

Professor and Chairman

Michael D. Gershon. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., 1963

Professors

Charles A. Ely. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1946; M.S., Hawaii, 1940; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1949

Melvin L. Moss. B.A., New York University, 1942; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

Charles R. Noback. B.S., Cornell, 1936; M.S., New York University, 1938; Ph.D., Minneso- ta, 1942

Virginia M. Tennyson (also Pathology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor, 1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Adjunct Professor

Manfred Otto Nahmmacher. Ph.D., Giessen (Germany), 1960

Associate Professors

Ernest W. April. B.S., Tufts, 1961; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969

Philip W. Brandt. B.A., Swarthmore, 1952; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia,

1960 Stephen B. Doty (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965 Eladio A. Nunez. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1951; M.S., 1953; Ph.D., New York

University, 1964 Karl H. Pfenninger. M.D., Zurich, 1971 Ann-Judith Silverman. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1967; Ph.D., 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Arline D. Deitch. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1954

Adjunct Associate Professor

Richard M. Hoar. B.A., Dartmouth, 1950; Ph.D., Kansas, 1956

Assistant Professors

Richard T. Ambron. B.S., Villanova, 1965; Ph.D., Temple, 1971

Craig H. Bailey (also Psychiatry). B.A., Lehigh, 1967; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., 1973

56 ANATOMY AND CELL BIOLOGY ANESTHESIOLOGY

Julia R. Currie. B.A., Harvard, 1967; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1974

Halina Den (in Neurology). B.S., Frankfurt, 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954; Ph.D.,

Michigan, 1958 Abraham B. Eastwood (in Neurology). B.S., Muhlenberg, 1965; M.S., Lehigh, 1967; Ph.D.,

1971 James P. Kelly. B.A., Harpur, 1966; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1971 Daniel M. Linkie (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1962; M.S., State University of New York (Albany), 1963; Ph.D., Michigan,

1971 Marie-France Maylie-Pfenninger. Baccalaureate, Algiers, 1960; L. is Sc, Marseilles, 1963;

Docteur de Specialite, 1967; Ph.D., 1972 Tuan Due Pham (also Pharmacology). B.S., St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S., Loyola,

1967; M. Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 Taube Pearl Rothman. B.A., City College, 1969; Ph.D., Cornell, 1975 Samuel Mark Schacher (also Psychiatry). B.S., Columbia, 1971; M.A., 1974; Ph.D., 1976 Michael A. Silver. B.A., Colgate, 1971; Ph.D., Rochester, 1977

Klaudiusz Weiss (also Psychiatry) (in Dentistry). M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State Univer- sity of New York (Stony Brook), 1973

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Ian Blair Fries. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES INSTRUCTOR

Gary E. Pickard, Ph.D. Sharon C. Colacino, Ph.D.

PTA^n-^ptT"'^-^- LECTURER

Ira Walhs, Ph.D. ^j^^^^, p ^^^^^^^^ p^^

STAFF ASSOCIATE Rochelle Small, Ph.D.

Anesthesiology

Professor and Chairman

Henrik H. Bendixen. M.D., Copenhagen, 1951

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland), 1941;

M.D., Geneva, 1957 Lester C. Mark. M.D., Toronto, 1941

Gabriel G. Nahas. M.D., Toulouse, 1944; Ph.D., Minnesota, 1953 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Pharmacology). M.B., National Central (Nanking), 1944

Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Leonard Brand. B.S., Yale, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Edgar C. Hanks. B.A., Gettysburg, 1943; M.D., Jefferson, 1947

Ernest Salanitre. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1936; M.D., Rome, 1942

Adjunct Professor

Sidney Spector (also Pharmacology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jefferson, 1956

ANESTHESIOLOGY 57

Associate Professors

Ralph A. Epstein. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1963

Allen I. Hyman (also Pediatrics). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College

1959 Hisayo O. Morishima. M.D., Toho (Tokyo), 1951; Ph.D., Tokyo, 1959 Eugene J. Pantuck. B.S., Tufts, 1959; M.D., 1963 J. Gilbert Stone. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate)

1964 Lubos Triner. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1955; Ph.D., 1961

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Richard S. Matteo. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate) 1955

Assistant Professors

Jeffrey Askanazi. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1971; M.D., Upstate Medical

Center (Syracuse), 1975 Keith J. Bernstein. B.A., New York University, 1968; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1974 Michael C. Damask. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1970; M.D., Chicago Medical School

1974 Foun-Chung Fan. M.D., Taipei Medical College (Taiwan), 1972 Arthur Donald Finck. B.S., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Warren K. Grodin. B.A., Minnesota, 1967; M.D., London, 1975 John A. Holzer. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1968; M.D., 1972 Hoshang Jal Khambatta. M.D., Karachi, 1958 Vance Lauderdale. B.A., Harvard, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1947 Pat J. Martin. B.S., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Leila M. Pang (also Pediatrics). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1964 Hilda Pedersen. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1958 David M. Richlin. B.A., Drew, 1970; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistrv

1974 Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard 1969- M.D

Cornell, 1973 Peter Salgo. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975 Yvonne Vulliemoz. M.S., Lausanne, 1956; Ph.D., Paris, 1969 Sook Young Woo. B.S., Ewha Women's University (Seoul), 1968; M.D., 1972 Jen-Tieng Wung. M.D., Taipei Medical College, 1956

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Ana Maria Lobo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon Faculty of Medicine, 1967

Dorothy A. Black. B.A., Rutgers, 1957; M.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Donald C. Brody. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1956

Kathryn A. W. Cozine. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1961

EUise S. Delphin. B.A., Barnard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975

Alber Faltas. M.D., Kasr-El-Ainy Medical School (Egypt), 1961

Richard F. Gallagher. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1968; M.D., New York University, 1973

Carolyn P. Greenberg. B.A., Stanford, 1962; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1966

John W. Hennessey. B.S, Massachusetts, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1966

Ina Lieberman. B.A., Barnard, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968

Dudley D. McDaniel. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1971; M.D., Autonoma (Mexico), 1975

58 ANESTHESIOLOGY

Kevin V. Sanborn. B.S., Manhattan, 1969; M.D., New York University, 1973

Medhat Riad Wassef. M.B., B.Ch., Cairo, 1957

Gerald S. Weinberger. M.D., New York University, 1948

Marcelle M. Willock. B.A., New Rochelle, 1958; M.D., Howard, 1962

Joseph Chuan-Shih Yang. B.S., Taiwan, 1959; M.D., Medical Academy (Dusseldorf), 1964

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL STAFF ASSOCIATES

ANESTHESIOLOGY James C. Dooley, M.A.

Alan Jay Young, M.D. Annamarie Giangarra, M.S.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES C^™' Pantuck, B.A.

Salha S. Daniel, Ph.D. '^^^''^ ^- ^"9""''' ^'^^

Mariagnes Verosky, B.A. Alvin Wald, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogens Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Andrew L. Rauscher. M.B., London, 1963; M.B.B.S., University College Hospital, 1966 Assistant Clinical Professor

Edward Palmer. B.A., Dartmouth, 1967; M.D., Cornell, 1971

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Herbert G. Cave. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1942; M.D., Howard, 1947 Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Elmer S. Foster. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Brussels, 1959

Archibald K. Hinds. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Montpellier, 1962

Gilbert Phanor. B.S., Lycee T. Gilboro, 1953; M.D., Medical School of Haiti, 1960

William Murray Smith. B.A., Michigan, 1954; M.D., Zurich, 1966

Madisetti Swamy. M.B., B.S., Osmania (India), 1954

J. Sinclair Trimiar. B.S., Howard, 1960; D.D.S., 1960

Francis Weekes. B.S., Johnson C Smith, 1941; D.D.S., Meharry, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Samuel C. Brisbane. B. A., Lincoln, 1937jM^+hward, 1949 Oscar N. Graves. B.A., Lincoln, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1949

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

John Rocco Calabro. B.S., Manhattan, 1971; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1975 Henry A. Connolly, Jr. B.S., Fordham, 1951; M.D., Hamburg, 1955 Demetrios B. Kalas. M.D., Aristotelian, 1954 Mary Louise White. B.S., Maryland, 1943; M.D, 1945

ANESTHESIOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY 59

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY Sami A.M. Abadir, M.D. Jane deV. Stark, M.D. Carol E. Zimmerman, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Professor

Louis Blancato. B.S., Fordham, 1942; M.D., New York Medical College, 1945 Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Ennio Gallozzi. M.D., Rome, 1953

Joseph lacovelli. B.A., Buffalo, 1952; M.D., Bologna, 1958

Ronald A. Andree. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1955; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1959

Assistant Clinical Professors

Errol N. Harding. B.A., M.D., CM, McGiil, 1949 Aino Tuul. M.D., Tartu (Estonia), 1942

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

ANESTHESIOLOGY ^, ,,, ,, y, ^^

Zdan J. Korduba, M.D.

Guglielmina Bettini, M.D. Han Chiang Lee, M.D.

Hilda H.C. Liu, M.D. Ignacio U. Ngo, M.D.

Alfred T.C. Peng, M.D. Kyaw Nyunt, M.B., B.S.

Altagracia H. Polanco, M.D. Kenneth A. Rothenberg, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL Kristappa Sangavaram, M.D. ANESTHESIOLOGY

Julio M. Garcia-Rodriguez, M.D. Byung Yang Kim, M.D.

Biochemistry

Robert Wood Johnson, Jr., Professor and Chairman

Isidore S. Edelman. B.A., Indiana, 1941; M.D., 1944

University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director, Institute of Cancer Research). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S., Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1944

Professors

Richard Axel (also Pathology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970

Reinhold Benesch. B.Sc., Leeds, 1941; M.Sc, 1945; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1950

Ruth E. Benesch. B.Sc, London, 1946; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1951

Max A. Eisenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1938; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Duke,

1950 Philip Feigelson. B.S., Queens, 1947; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1951 Robert F. Goldberger. M.D., New York University, 1958

Arthur Karlin (also Neurology). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Alvin I. Krasna. B.A., Yeshiva, 1950; Ph.D. Columbia, 1955

60 BIOCHEMISTRY

Seymour Lieberman (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois,

1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941 Barbara W. Low. B.A., Oxford, 1942; M.A., 1946; D. Phil., 1948 Maurice M. Rapport (in Psychiatry). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; Ph.D.,

California Institute of Technology, 1946 Parithychery Srinivasan. B.Sc, Madras, 1946; Ph.D., 1953

Adjunct Professor

Benno P. Schoenborn. (Australia), 1962

B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1958; Ph.D., New South Wales

Associate Professors

Roger M. Burnett. B.Sc, The Polytechnic (London), 1964; Ph.D., Purdue, 1970 Allen M. Gold. B.A., Chicago, 1950; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Dezider Grunberger (also Public Health). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; Sc.D., 1968

Adjunct Associate Professor

John D. Karkas. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Senior Research Associate

David Elwyn (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

George Alexander (in Psychiatry). B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953

Hagen P Bayley. B.Sc, Oxford, 1974; Ph.D., Harvard, 1979

Irving Goodman (in Surgery). B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., 1944

Lee Makowski. B.S., Brown, 1971; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1973;

Ph.D., 1976 Herbert L. Meltzer (in Psychiatry). B.S., Long Island, 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950 James L. Roberts (in International Institute for Study of Human Reproduction). B.S.,

Colorado State, 1973; Ph.D., Oregon, 1977 Kamil Ugurbil. Ph.D., Columbia, 1977 Bonnie Ann Wallace. Ph.D., Yale, 1977

ASSOCIATE

Carola P. Zimmerman,

Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Martha Redden Kimball,

Ph.D. Jade Li, Ph.D. Richard S. Magliozzo, B.A. Sahebarao Mahadik, Ph.D.

(in Psychiatry) Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.

(in Obstetrics

and Gynecology) Alicia M. Spencer, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Karen A. Bucher, Ph.D. STAFF ASSOCIATES

Stephen L. Ginell, Ph.D. Susanna Yung Kwong, M.S. James Pachence, Ph.D. Addison Rosenkrans, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS

Erwin Chargaff, M.D. Zacharias Dische, M.D.

(in Ophthalmology) Karl Meyer, M.D. (in

Ophthalmology) David Nachmansohn, M.D.

(in Neurology) David B. Sprinson, M.D.

BIOCHEMISTRY DERMATOLOGY 61

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Adjunct Associate Professor

Theodore Peters, Jr. (in Medicine). B.S., Lehigh, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1950 Adjunct Assistant Professor

Leonard A. Sauer. M.D., Rochester, 1961; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1966

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Utapalendu S. Maitra, Ph.D. Venkitachalem P. Mohan, Ph.D.

Dermatology

Professor and Chairman

Leonard C. Harber. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., New York University, 1953

At Presbyterian Hospital

Clinical Professors

Saul L. Sanders. B.A., Kenyon, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1952 Dorothy Windhorst. B.A., Chicago, 1948; M.D., 1954

Associate Professor

Richard L. Edelson. B.A., Hamilton, 1966; M.D., Yale, 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Dermatology

Maureen B. Poh. B.S., Siena, 1964; M.D., Tennessee, 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

Jack Eisert. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., State University of New York, 1956 David N. Silvers (also Pathology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968 Richard A. Walzer. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Assistant Professors

Alan D. Andrews. B.S., Illinois, 1968; M.D., Virginia, 1972

Robert B. Armstrong. B.A., Haverford, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Irene E. Kochevar. Ph.D., Michigan State, 1970

Robert R. Walther. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., North Carolina, 1973

Assistant Clinical Professors

Irving Abrahams. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New York,

1954 Vincent S. Beltrani. B.A., Brooklyn, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 William De Pietro. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1972; M.D., Georgetown,

1976

62 DERMATOLOGY HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT

Marc E. Grossman. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1970; M.D., Pennsylvania,

1974 Eric W. Herman. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1972; M.D., Mt. Sinai,

1976 Einar A. Juhlin. B.S., Illinois, 1950; M.D., Royal Charles (Sweden), 1957 Steven R. Kohn. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1968 Theodore A. Labow. B.S., Miami, 1951; M.D., Tufts, 1955 Jack H. Rozen. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1958; M.D., 1962 Gregory Zalar. B.S., George Washington, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

William G. Atwood, M.D. Robert P. Feinstein, M.D. Paul Ira Schneiderman,

M.D. Eugene W. Sweeney, M.D. Harvey I. Weinberg, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Carole L. Berger, Ed.D. Shinichiro Takezaki, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Leon K. Demar, M.D. Jeffery S. Kezis, M.D. Joseph A. Penner, M.D. Douglas Pravda, M.D. Joseph S. Shapiro, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY {continued)

Luis A. Suarez, M.D. Lawrence M. Wells, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Timothy J. Corey, M.D. William J. Cunningham,

M.D. Joan P. Noroff, M.D. Margaret S. Ravits, M.D. Kass Sadri, M.D. Robert S. Seibt, M.D. George E. Thome, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Anthony C. Chu, M.B., B.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Sian M. Chu, M.B.B.Ch. Francis P. Gasparro, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Minjoong Yoon, Ph.D. J. Lowry Miller, M.D.

LECTURERS

Margarita S. Hutner, Ph.D. Angelo A. Lamola, Ph.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Alexander W. Young, Jr. B.S, Maryland, 1944; M.D., 1946 Assistant Clinical Professors

Peter C. Lombardo. B.S., Rochester, 1955; M.D., Albany, 1959 David Sibulkin. B.A., New York University, 1962; M.D., 1966 Gregory Zalar. B.S., George Washington, 1965; M.D., 1969

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Herbert H. Hochman, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Elaine V. DiGrande, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Joshua S. Berger, M.D. Stanley J. Lewis, M.D.

Human Genetics and Development

Professor and Acting Chanrman

Arthur Bank (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., 1960

HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT 63

University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director, Institute of Cancer Research). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S., Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1944

Professors

Kimball C. Atwood. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., New York University, 1946

Arthur D. Bloom (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Boston,

1949; M.D., Tufts, 1955 Elvin A. Kabat (also Microbiology) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1932; M. A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Paul A. Marks (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1949 Orlando J. Miller (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950 Richard A. Rifkind (also Medicine). B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Professor of Mathematical Statistics and Genetics

Howard Levene (in Biological Sciences and Mathematical Statistics). B.A., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Columbia, 1947

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

L. Erlenmyer-Kimling. B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1960 John D. Rainer. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.A., 1944; M.D., 1951

Adjunct Professors

Sidney Udenfriend. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; Ph.D., New York

University, 1948 Arthur Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1947; Ph.D., Columbia, 1953 Herbert Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; Ph.D., George Washing- ton, 1957

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Dorothy Warburton. B.S., McGill, 1957; Ph.D., 1961 Adjunct Associate Professors

Ronald H. Kaback. B.A., Haverford, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein College of Medicine,

1962 Michael Ian Sherman. B.S.C, McGill, 1965; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony

Brook), 1969 David Webb. B.A., California State, 1966; M.A., 1968; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Senior Research Associates

Harold I. Calvin (in International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). B.A.,

Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1964 Fred R. Kramer. B.S., Michigan, 1964; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1969 Dorothy A. Miller. B.A., Wilson, 1952; Ph.D., Yale, 1957 Donald R. Mills. B.A., Indiana, 1962; M.A., 1964; Ph.D., Illinois, 1968

Assistant Professors

Marian B. Carlson. B.A., Radcliffe, 1973; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978 Ann S. Henderson. B.S., Winthrop, 1960; Ph.D., North Carolina, 1966 Debra Wolgemuth. B.A., Gettysburg, 1969; M.A., Vanderbilt, 1971; M. Phil, Columbia, 1975; Ph.D., 1977

64 HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT MEDICINE

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Mary Rita Greenwood B.A., Vassar, 1968; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1973

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES LECTURER

Jye-Siung Fang, Ph.D. Jerard Hurwitz, Ph.D.

Harlow K. Fischman, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Ye-Chin Choi, Ph.D. John K. Cowell, Ph.D.

Medicine

Professor of Clinical Medicine and Acting Chairman

Thomas Q. Morris. B.A., Notre Dame, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Arthur Bank (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D.,

Harvard, 1960 J. Thomas Bigger, Jr. (also Pharmacology). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Vincent P. Butler, Jr. B.A., St. Peter's, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Robert E. Canfield. B.S., Lehigh, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1957 Paul J. Cannon. B.A., Holy Cross, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958 Rose R. Ellison (in the Cancer Center). B.A., Barnard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1948 Andrew G. Frantz. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 Robert M. Glickman. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 DeWitt S. Goodman (Tilden-Weger-Bieler Professor of Preventive Medicine). B.A., Harvard,

1951; M.D., 1955 Rejane M. Harvey. B.A., Vassar, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943 John N. Loeb. B.A., Harvard 1957; M.D., 1961 Paul A. Marks (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D.,

1949 Harold C. Neu (also Pharmacology). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Hymie L. Nossel. M.B., Ch.B., Cape Town, 1953; Ph.D., Oxon, 1962 Elliott F. Osserman (American Cancer Society Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D.,

1947 Benvenuto Pemis (also Microbiology). M.D., Milan, 1947 Richard A. Rifkind (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D.,

Columbia, 1955 John V. Taggart (also Physiology). M.D., Southern California, 1940 Donald F. Tapley. B.S., Acadia, 1948; M.D., Chicago, 1952 Gerard M. Turino. B.A., Princeton, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1948 I. Bernard Weinstein (also Public Health). B.S., Wisconsin, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

Felix E. Demartini. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1946

M. Irene Ferrer. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941

Donald A. Holub. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1952

Israel Jaffe. B.S., New York University, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1950

MEDICINE 65

Edgar Leifer. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., Columbia, 1939; Ph.D.,

1941; M.D., 1946 Robert Palmer. B.A., Oberlin, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957 Robert N. Taub. B.A., Yeshiva, 1957; M.D., Yale, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1969 Robert T. Whitlock. B.A., North Carolina, 1950; M.D., 1957

Professor of Social Medicine

Robert J. Weiss (also Psychiatry and Public Health). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Clinical Professors

Stuart W. Cosgriff. B.A., Holy Cross, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942 John R. Edsall. B.A., Cambridge, 1945; M.B., B.Ch., 1948 Jay 1. Meltzer. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Kermit L. Pines. B.A., Columbia, 1937; M.D., 1942 Richard J. Stock. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947 John A. Wood. B.A., Harvard 1943; M.D., 1946

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Physiology). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1952 Leslie Baer. B.A., Wisconsin, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963 John P. Bilezikian. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Peter R. B. Caldwell. B.A., Dartmouth, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958 Leonard Chess. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1964; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1968

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Yale Enson. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1953

Dorothy Estes. B.S., Wheaton (Massachusetts), 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Robert H. Heisenbuttel. B.A., Thiel, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Wylie C. Hembree, 111 (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D.,

Washington (St. Louis), 1964 George W. Melcher, Jr. B.A., Colorado, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946 Jane H. Morse. B.A., Smith, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 James A. Reiffel. B.A., Duke, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Frank R. Smith. B.A., Dartmouth, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Joseph G. Sweeting. B.S., Holy Cross, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1956 Henry M. Thomas, III. B.A., Haverford, 1950; M.D., 1957 Melvin B. Weiss. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1962; M.D., State University

of New York (Downstate), 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

Ralph S. Blume. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

John O. Burris. B.S., Wyoming, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1956

Peter A. Gross. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Yale, 1964

Lionel Grossbard. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

George A. Hyman. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., 1945

Abbie I. Knowlton. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

William Lovejoy. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1962

David J. McConnell. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., Yale, 1962

George H. McCormack, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Hans Neuberg. B.A., Wagner, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1950

66 MEDICINE

Earl A. Wheaton, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Assistant Professors

Gerald B. Appel. B.A., Cornell, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Conrad B. Blum. B.S., Northwestern, 1969; M.D., 1971

Thomas A. Brasitus. B.A., Connecticut, 1967; M.D., Jefferson, 1971

Randolph Cole. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1973

Oliver T. Fein. B.A., Swarthmore, 1962; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1967

Steven M. Friedman. B.A., Princeton, 1968; M.D., Cornell, 1972

Glenda J. Garvey. B.A., Wellesley, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Elsa-Grace V. Giardina. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., New York Medical College, 1965

Steven Grant. M.D., Mt Sinai Medical School, 1973

Peter Green. M.B., B.S., Sydney (Australia), 1970

James P. Halper. B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., 1971

Karen L. Kaplan. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1963; M.D., Ph.D., Chicago, 1969

Hugh Nellans (also Physiology). B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971

Allen Bryant Nichols. B.A., Yale, 1961; M.D., Virginia, 1971

Juan Oliver. B.A., Bachiller Institute, 1961; M.D., Barcelona (Spain), 1967

John Owen. B.ScM., McMaster (Ontario) 1972; M.D., 1974

Constance Park. B.A., Radcliffe, 1974; M.S., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Marjorie Perloff. B.A., Bennington, 1965; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1969

Eric R. Powers. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., Harvard, 1974

Frederick G. Rapoport. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969;

M.D., Cornell, 1973 William H. Sherman. B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1967; M.D., Jefferson, 1969 Ethel S. Siris. B.A., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D, Columbia, 1971 Alan R. Tall. M.B., B.S., Sydney (Australia), 1970 Francis M. Weld. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D, Columbia, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Lester W. Blair. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D, 1974

David K. Blood. B.A., Amherst, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Norma M.T.W. Braun. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Peter J. Buchin. B.A., Williams, 1970; M.D., Yale, 1974

Robert H. DeBellis. B.S., Queens, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Ronald E. Drusin. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Kenneth C. Fine. M.D., Catholic (Louvain, Belgium), 1970

Jerry Glicklich. B.A., Columbia, 1969; M.D., 1975

Mark J. Goldberger. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Victoria E. Guy. B.A., Duke, 1968; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1976

Thomas P. Jacobs. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1968

Lynne L. Johnson. B.A., Wellesley, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Cheryl Kunis. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1975

Rafael A. Lantigua. M.D., Autonomous (Santo Domingo), 1972

Oscar Lebwohl. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1972

Robert M. Magrisso. B.A., Franklin and Marshall, 1969; M.S.E., Johns Hopkins, 1972;

M.D., Albert Einstein, 1976 Aaron Manson, B.A. Pennsylvania, 1972; M.D., 1976 Robert McConnell. B.A., Hamilton, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973 Robin O. Motz. B.A., Columbia, 1959; Ph.D., 1965; M.D., 1975 Carmen Ortiz-Neu. B.A., Wellesley, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963 Kenneth M. Prager. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1968 Marshall Primack. B.A., Louisville, 1961; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1965 Edith B. Reilly. B.A., Smith, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

MEDICINE 67

John L. Roglieri. B.A., B.S., Lehigh, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1966

Martin J. Saltzman. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1972 Harvey A. Schneier. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1967 Peter E. Schrag. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., 1964

Allan Schwartz. B.S., City College, 1967; M.S., Harvard, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1974 Alan H. Seplowitz. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., 1972 Richard V. Sims III. B.A., Amherst, 1970; M.D., Harvard, 1974 Mark Stoopler. B.S., Tulane, 1971; M.D., Cornell, 1974 Joseph Tenenbaum. B.A., Brandeis, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1974 Byron Thomashow. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Jack B. Weissman. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Harvard, 1970 Gail S. Williams. B.A., Wellesley 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968 Chun Keung Yip. B.S., St. Francis (Brooklyn), 1972; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1976

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Elizabeth R. Prichard. B.A., Adelphi, 1943; M.S., New York School of Social Work, 1947

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alfred Becker. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Michael H. Cohen. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1961; M.D., 1965

Clarence J. D'Alton. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Richard B. Duane, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Juan G. Edreira. M.D., Havana, 1951

Daniel L. Larson. M.D., Columbia, 1946

Arnold Lisio. B.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1961

Daniel L. Macken. B.A., Holy Cross, 1955; M.D., Boston, 1960

Michael F. Parry. B.A., Yale, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

John Postley. B.A., Yale, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968

Nicholas Rango. B.S., St. Louis, 1966; M.D., Northwestern, 1970

Arthur 1. Snyder. B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1950

Jeffrey A. Stein. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Cornelius J. Tyson. B.A., Princeton, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Assistant Clinical Professor of Social Medicine

Eric R. Marcus (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Marcia B. Bull, M.D. Elias M. Kaimakliotis, M.D. Robert Lewy, M.D. Alan L. Saroff, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN SOCIAL MEDICINE

Arthur L. Caplan, Ph.D. RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Steven Birken, Ph.D. Bonnie Bray, M.D. Gordon A. Campbell, Ph.D. Joseph Cerreta, Ph.D. Rose D'Alisa, Ph.D. Paul Ehrlich, Ph.D. Lloyd Fleisher, Ph.D. James Koehn, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES (continued)

Chung Y. Liu, Ph.D. Mohammed M. Osman,

D.V.M. lldiko Radichevich, Ph.D. Steven L. Roffman, Ph.D. Michael Schonberg, Ph.D. Robert R. Sciacca, M.S. John E. Smith, Ph.D. George Taliadovros, M.D. Larry D. Witte, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Ronald D. Adelman, M.D. Howard J. Barnum, M.D. Eli Bauman, M.D. Louis D. Carmichael, M.D. Herbert Chase, Jr., M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE {continued]

Jorge Cortes-Quinones,

M.D. Ann P. D'Adamo, M.D. Arthur R. DeSimone, M.D. Stephen Lyle Gluck, M.D. Michael Goldman, M.D. Lonnie B. Hanauer, M.D. Ralph Herz, Jr., M.D. Oscar Irigoyen, M.D. Constantine P.

Ladapoulos, M.D. Pamela Ann Lawrence,

M.D. Raymond Lippert, M.D. Pier Mancusi-Ungaro, M.D. Marcia Naveh, M.D. Eduardo R. Pons, Jr., M.D.

68 MEDICINE

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

MEDICINE {continued)

Harriet Lynn Raik, M.D. Susan Lee Rattner.M.D. Dennis S. Reison, M.D. Elizabeth Shane, M.D. Jane S. Sillman, M.D. David B. Sutter, M.D. Sharon Wardlaw, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Helen-Ann Garcia, M.D. Joseph Heller, M.D. John E. McWhorter, M.D. Mate L. Marinovich, M.D. Milovan T. Rakic, M.D. Thomas J. Rakowski, M.D. John M. Rodgers, M.D. Richard H. Runser, M.D. Adele Tedeschi, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Joan Sobel, M.S. Margaret Willhite, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Hormoz Ashtanyi, M.D. Kenneth S. Bannerman,

M.D. John Thomas Barnard, M.D. Zea Borek, M.B.Ch.B. Deborah L. Brennan, B.S. James Coromillas, M.D. Mary Dalecki, B.A. Michael Drillings, M.S. Doris Tse Eng, B.A. Sylvia H. Ford, M.A. Donald L. Gammon, B.S. Michelle Greene, Ph.D. Anne Hurlet, M.D. Alan 1. Kalischer, M.D. Michamasa Kate, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

{continued)

Kalliope S. LaGamma, B.S. Frank D. Livelli, M.D. Maria J. Saraiva, M.Sc. Yolene Thomas, M.D. Dominique A. Weber, L.esSc.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Henry Aranow, Jr., M.D. Hylan A. Bickerman, M.D. Andre F. Cournand, M.D. Albert Lamb, M.D. Hamilton Southworth, M.D. Alfred Steiner, M.D.

LECTURERS

Nicholas Christy, M.D. Edward E. Fischel, M.D. Eric S. Lichtenstein, M.D. William M. Manger, M.D. John H. McCiement, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

John S. Davis. B.A., Hamilton, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956

Walter Franck. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

Herbert J. Marx. B.E.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1972 B.A., Holy Cross, 1968; M.D., Georgetown, 1972 B.A., Emory, 1949; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1953 B.A., Harpur, 1964; M.S., Howard, 1967; M.D., Medical College of

Peter L. Arquin. John F. D'Avella. Emery C. Herman. Gary S. Hoffman.

Virginia, 1971 Peter J. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1971; M.D., McGill, 1975 Alan J. Kozak. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., 1969 Don V. Lewis. B.A., North Carolina, 1967; M.D., 1971 John J. May. B.S., Notre Dame, 1969; M.D., Case Western, 1973 Eric Michael Mazur. B.S.E., Princeton, 1971; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1975 Carolyn I. Mook. B.A., Smith, 1969; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1973 William H. Mook. B.A., Wesleyan, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944 David S. Pratt. B.A., New Hampshire, 1967; M.D., Tufts, 1971 Donald A. Raddatz. B.A., Holy Cross, 1971; M.D., Minnesota, 1975 Allan G. Ramsay. B.A., Western Ontario, 1947; M.D., 1948 William H. Ramsey. B.A., Dartmouth, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Richard E. Reese. B.A., Dartmouth, 1965; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Dennis A. Savoie. B.A., Providence, 1967; M.D., Vermont, 1971 Robert S. Sioussat. B.A., Wesleyan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951 William Streck. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968;M.D., Missouri, 1973

David S. Svahn. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1965 David W. Vaules. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; B.M.S., 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1963 Gary Weaver. B.A., Goshen, 1964; M.D, Kansas, 1968

MEDICINE 69

Assistant Clinical Professor

Donald O. Pollock. B.A., Hamilton, 1951; M.D., Harvard, 1955

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

MEDICINE MEDICINE

Antoinette Kuzminski, M.D. Carole L. Nunamaker, M.D.

Thomas M. Miller, M.D. Stephen E. Szebenyi, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professors

John Lindenbaum. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1959

Gerald E. Thomson (Samuel Lambert Professor). B.S., Queens, 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959

Clinical Professors

Harold S. Ballard. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1948; M.D., Meharry, 1952 Kenneth Sterling. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

David Jocelyn Clain. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1959; M.D., 1968

Charles P. Felton. B.Sc, Xavier, 1949; M.D., Geneva, 1956

Clayton L. Natta (in Pathology). B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1957; M.D., Toronto, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

George C. Branche. B.A., Bowdoin, 1944; M.D., Boston, 1948

John B. Cromie. M.D., Belfast (Northern Ireland), 1949

William R. Cunnick, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Jeanne A. Smith. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957

Charles M. Yergan. B.S., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947

Assistant Professors

Anne M. Briscoe. M.A., Vassar, 1945; Ph.D., Yale, 1949 Thomas J. Garrett. M.D., Queen's (Ontario), 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Jay Brown. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968

Peter C. T. Dickinson. B.S., McGill, 1958; M.D., 1962

Jay Franklin Dobkin. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1972

Donald A. Feinfeld. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Kenneth J. Herwig. B.A., Syracuse, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1971

Wanda Devora Huff. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., Yale, 1973

Steven Z. Kussin. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

James T. Chien. M.D., Yale-in-China Medical College, 1943 Marvin C. Cooper. B.S., Queens, 1960; M.D., St. Louis, 1965 Milena L. Lewis. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Richard R. Prouty. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1948

70 MEDICINE

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

John C. DiJohn, M.D. Pearl D. Foster, M.D. Paul Killian, M.D. Anthony J. Marano, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Jeffrey N. Bradshaw, M.D. James T. T. Chien, M.D. Bennie W. Chiles, M.D. Carl A. Gamier, M.D. Major Geer, M.D. Michael H. Gordon, M.D. Ross T. Hamilton, M.D. James H. Hubert, M.D. Herbert Knight, M.D. Thomas J. Mattimore, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE [continued)

Clarence S. Murray, M.D. Luigi M.F. Negri, M.D. Hazeline M. Nurse, M.D. Ruth C. Onukwue, M.D. Velvie Ann Pogue, M.D. Jon Rothenberg, M.D. William J. Schwartz, M.D. Eric J. Vanderbush, M.D. Michael D. Williams, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Douglas Miller, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER

Cecil G. Marquez, M.D.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine

Robert Lindsay. M.P.C.B., Glasgow, 1968; Ph.D., 1969

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine

Albert S. Klainer. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts, 1961

Assistant Clinical Professor

Joseph Ryan. 1970

B.S., Notre Dame, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Kenneth R. Adler, M.D. Hillel Ben-Asher, M.D. Joel E. Cannilla, M.D. Alan Chanin, M.D. Bernard Davidoff, M.D. Arthur Fisch, M.D. Arthur J. Geller, M.D. Gary Gerstein, M.D. Stephen Guss, M.D. Arthur N. Hoagland, M.D. Stephen D. Krasnica, M.D. Oscar R. Kruest, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE (continued)

Suohir Mehta, M.D. Earl Nielson, M.D. John S. Salaki, M.D. Michael A. Samach, M.D. Felix Schletter, M.D. Zalam R. Schrader, M.D. Leo H. Siegel, M.D. Lawrence B. Stein, M.D. Jerrold M. Stock, M.D. John S. Thompson, M.D. Gary R. Weine, M.D. Barry R. Zitomer, M.D.

MEDICINE 71

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professors

Michael Bernstein. M.D., New York Medical College, 1953

William F. Minogue. B.S., Seton Hall, 1951; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine

John J. Gregory. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1953; M.D., Albany, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors (Family Practice)

Donald F. Kent. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1935; M.D., 1940 Richard N. Podell. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joel L. Duberstein. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Robert A. Fuhrman. B.A., Clark, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966

Mary T. Herald. B.A., New Rochelle, 1965; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1969 William N. Toth. B.S., Georgetown, 1956; M.D., Hahnemann, 1960

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

MEDICINE MEDICINE (continued)

Stephen J. Fischl, M.D. R. Gregory Sachs, M.D.

Peter Goodluck, M.D. Robert R. Springer, M.D.

William A. Tansey 111, M.D. Michael Suhl, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ^^^h^^L^- TS^^I^^-^'

MEDICINE Burton Tucker, M.D.

. r- o II »* i-N William E. Wagner,

Kevin E. Bell, M.D. J M D

Donald J. Brock, M.D. d- u ' j \a u; u x* r>

^,. I »« r^ Richard M. Weinberg, M.D.

H. Oliver Brown, Jr., M.D. ^'

Kopel Burk, M.D. ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

Charles W. Clarke, Jr., M.D. MEDICINE

Andrew Coronato, Jr., M.D. Joseph Belladonna, M.D.

H. William Diefendorf, M.D. Joseph T. Faraldo, M.D.

Charles E. Dooley, Jr., M.D. Eugene R. Kelly, M.D.

John T. Farry, M.D. Michael B. Kerner, M.D.

Robert B. Francis, M.D. A. Ralph Kristeller, M.D.

Sidney E. Friedman, M.D. David P. Miller, M.D.

Samuel M. Gray, M.D. Lawrence J. Nastro, M.D.

Thomas V. Inglesby, M.D. Steven J. Stanzione, M.D.

Robert P. Margie, M.D. David Allen Worth, M.D.

Sanford M. Reiss, M.D.

Melvin Rubinstein, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors

A. L. Loomis Bell. B.S., Wesleyan, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947 John F. Bertles. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., Harvard 1952 Robert B. Case. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Peter R. Holt. B.Sc, Tolington, 1949; M.B., B.S., London, 1954 Gerald B. Phillips. B.A., Princeton, 1946; M.D., Harvard, 1948

72 MEDICINE

Theodore B. Van Itallie. B.S., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1945 Harvey J. Weiss. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

William S. Clark. B.S., Dayton; M.D., St. Louis, 1938

Stanley Cortell. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts, 1961

Michael H. Grieco. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1957 A. Gregory Jameson. B.A., Harvard, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1950 Richard N. Pierson, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Clinical Professors

Philip H. Henneman. B.A., Harvard, 1943; M.D., 1946

Miles J. Schwartz. B.S., Queens (New York), 1947; M.D., New York University, 1961

Associate Professor

F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer. B.A., Oberlin, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Norman A. Cagin. B.S., Rutgers, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

Edward M. Dwyer, Jr. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Harvey G. Kemp. B.A., Oklahoma, 1955; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1959

Marianne J. Legato. B.A., Manhattanville, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1962

Alice Maniatis. M.D., Athens, 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard P. Ames. B.A., Williams, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Albert Attia. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.D., 1958

C. Redington Barrett. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

James B. Gabriel. B.A., Brown, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1949

Jonas M. Goldstone. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Albert W. Grokoest. B.S., Hamilton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Saul Kaplan. B.S., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Tennessee, 1959

Arthur Karanas. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1958 Richard McCray. B.A., Wesleyan, 1954; B.D., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Myron C. Patterson. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1943 Bruce H. Pinkernell. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1960; M.D., 1964 Norton S. Rosensweig. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 Henry G. Schaffeld. B.A., Columbia, 1938; M.D., 1941 Lawrence Scharer. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958 Gerald Weintraub. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954 Myron C. Wright. B.A., Dartmouth, 1937; M.D., New York University, 1940 Herman Ziffer. B.A., Brooklyn, 1949; M.D., Chicago, 1953

Senior Research Associate

Beatrice M. Fairchild. B.A., Hunter, 1942; M.A., Bryn Mawr, 1943; Ph.D., 1948

Assistant Professors

Richard CoUens. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; M.D., New York

University, 1966 Donald Philip Kotler. M. D. , Albert Einstein, 1973

MEDICINE 73

Michelle P. Warren (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Judith Axelrod. B.S., Wellesley, 1963; M.D., Cornell, 1967

Le Clair Bissell. B.A., Colorado, 1955; M.D., 1958

Jeffrey M. Brensilver. M.D., Columbia, 1971

Airlee A.C. Cameron. B.A., Radcliffe, 1957; M.D., CM, McGHI, 1961

Richard Gunnar Carlson. B.S., Trinity, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Edward W. Colt. M.D., University College Hospital (London), 1962

Michael Lange. M.D., Toronto, 1968

Gertrude Scott Lefavour. B.A., Gaucher, 1965; M.D., Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1970 Arthur J. Lennon. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Jonathan A. Lorch. B.A., Wisconsin, 1968; M.D.,Tulane, 1972 Allen Mogtader. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1970 Robert C. Rinker. B.A., Antioch, 1965; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1969

Jean W. Saleh. B.A., St. Joseph (Beirut), 1957; M.D., Faculte Francaise de Medicin, 1964 Seiichi Shimomura. M.D., Okayama (Japan), 1945 William J. Vicic. B.S., Yale, 1966; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors

Samir E. Alam. B.S., American (Beirut), 1968; M.D., 1972

William J. Athos. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1956 Robert S. Beekman. B.A., Harvard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943 Harvey Benovitz. B.A., Washington & Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Robert Bernot. B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Buffalo, 1960 Carlton Boxhill. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968 Earl B. Brown. B.S., Emory, 1938; M.D., 1942 Donald P. Dallas. B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1954 George Dermksian. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.A., 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 Robert K. Emy. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1957 James A. Feltman. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1944 Richard P. Fried. B.A., Brown, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968 Oscar R. Garfein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., 1965 Zane Gaut. B.S., Birmingham Southern, 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 Richard Geltman. B.A., Rutgers, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971 Henry M. Greenberg. B.A., University of Pennsylvania, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1968 Joseph A. Grossman. B.S., City College of New York, 1953; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1957 Julian B. Hyman. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1947 John H. Keating. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1943 Ronald Kraft. B.S., Michigan, 1966; M.D., Cincinnati, 1970 Athanasius Mallios. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1973 David K. Meriney. B.A., Duke, 1956; M.D., 1960 Lawson A. Moyer III. B.A., Virginia, 1968; M.D., 1972 William M. Nicholas. B.A., Williams, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Syracuse),

1954 Edward H. Reisner. B.A., Columbia, 1935; M.D., 1939 Robert B. Roven. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957

Eugene Santilli. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1958; M.D., Bologna (Italy), 1964 Morton Schwimmer. B.A., Lafayette (Pennsylvania), 1948; M.D., Jefferson, 1951 Kenneth N. Weinstein. B.A., Vermont, 1955; M.D., New York University, 1959

74 MEDICINE MICROBIOLOGY

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

MEDICINE

Charles A. Adsit, M.D. Kenneth A. Altman, M.D. Wendy Aronson, M.D. Jose L. Barbosa

Saldivar, M.D. John Thomas

Cappadona, M.D. Paul J. Chrzanowski, M.D. Albert Cohen, M.D. James Ducey, M.D. Martin Jay Frankel, M.D. Eugene Freundlich, M.D. Francis G. Geer, M.D. Maurice F. Goodbody, M.D. Barry E. Goozner, M.D. William S. Hopewell, M.D. Michael Robinson Irwin,

M.D. Herbert Ivan Jernow, M.D. Annetta J. Kimball, M.D. Robert P. Lombardo, M.D. Thomas M. Nail, M.D. John J. Olichney, M.D. Nicholas Steiner, M.D. Thomas Tamlyn, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Mukul Kumar Basu, Ph.D. M. Saeed Khan, Ph.D. Bruce R. Lages, M.D. Mohan Muthireval Reddy, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Eric Andreae, M.D. Vernon G. Baker, M.D. Lestrino C. Baquiran, M.D. Michael S. Baum, M.D. Michael Borecky, M.D. Cecil B. Broderick, M.D. David Stewart Carroll, M.D. John Cohn, M.D. John Cornwall, M.D. High C. Davidson, M.D. Margaret Dessau, M.D. Rosina B. Dixon, M.D. Jerome Paul Ehrlich, M.D. Jeanne Fastook, M.D. Alan Feit. M.D. James W. Fingerhut, M.D. Donald R. Fishman, M.D. Stuart W. Foster Dennis Gage, M.D. Dulaney Glen, M.D. Carolyn E. Goodstein, M.D. Antoine C. Harovas, M.D. Katherine A. Hawkins, M.D. Sheila Joy Herscovitch,

M.D. Karl R. Hoffman, M.D. Peter L. Hofmann, M.D. Wade A. Johnson. M.D. Mitchell Kahn. M.D. Martin Philip Kasofsky,

M.D. Edith Joan Langner. M.D. Alfred Miller, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE {continued)

Lazare Novack, M.D. Norman Peeler, M.D. Anthony J. Pepe. M.D. Martin Saul Pine, M.D. Ernest C. Richards. M.D. Thomas D. Robinson, M.D. Harry A. Roselle. M.D. Nicholas J. Rummo. M.D. Thomas Clark Scanlan,

M.D. Clyde N. Schechter, M.D. Howard N. Schwartz. M.D. Mark V. Sherrid, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Dennis George Huskins,

M.D. Vincent Mchta, M.B.B.S. Richard R. Neufield, M.D. Mary E. O'Brien, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Thalia Boussios, Ph.D. Hisham F. Nakshbendi, B.S. Katherine P. Porikos. Ph.D. Jack Wang, M.S. Mei-Uih Yang, M.D.

LECTURERS

Marcelle Lavau. Ph.D. David Schudmmer. M.D.

Microbiology

John E. Borne Professor and Chairman

Harold S. Ginsberg. B.A., Duke, 1937; M.D., Tulane. 1941

Professors

Paul D. Ellner (also Pathology). B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.D.. Southern California. 1952;

Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 Bernard F. Erlanger. B.S.. College of the City of New York. 1943; M.A.. New York

University, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1951 Gabriel S. Godman (also Pathology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Elvin A. Kabat (also Human Genetics) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Wladyslaw Manski (in Ophthalmology). M. Phil.. Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc., Wroclaw, 1951 Benvenuto Pemis (also Medicine). M.D., Milan, 1947 Henry J. Vogel (in Pathology). B.S., London. 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941

MICROBIOLOGY 75

Professor of Oral Biology

Solon A. Ellison. B.S., Columbia, 1942; D.D.S., 1946; Ph.D., 1958

Adjunct Professors

Dean L. Englehardt. B.S., Amherst, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1967 Louis H. Muschel. B.S., New York, 1936; A.M., Columbia, 1938; M.S., Yale, 1951; Ph.D., 1953

Associate Professors

Sherie L. Morrison. B.A., Stanford, 1963; Ph.D., 1966 Saul J. Silverstein. B.S., Cornell, 1968; Ph.D., Florida, 1971

Adjunct Associate Professor

Victor Bokkenheuser. M.D., Copenhagen, 1945

Assistant Professors

Andrei Augustin. M.D., Bucharest (Rumania), 1969

David H. Figurski. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1969; Ph.D., Rochester, 1974

Ramareddy V. Guntaka. B.S., Andhra (India), 1963; M.Sc, Agra (India), 1965; Ph.D.,

Kansas, 1970 David S. Hodes (also Pediatrics). B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Christine A. Milcarek. B.S., Duquesne, 1968; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1972 Charles S.H. Young. B.A., Oxford, 1966; D. Phil., 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Yvonne A. Lue. Ph.D., Columbia, 1976

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Paul B. Fisher, Ph.D. Norbert H. Wasserman, Eng.Sc.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

William L. Cleveland, M.D. Louise A. Goode, B.A. Albert Ming-Tao Wu, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Harriet Castleman, B.S. Shih M. Chen, Ph.D. Leila Fisher, Ph.D. Paul M. Kalados, Ph.D. Ulla Lindholm, Ph.D. Judyta Praszkier, Ph.D. Arepalli S. Rao, Ph.D. Giampaolo Tonda

SPECIAL LECTURERS

Charles L. Fox, Jr., M.D. Konrad C. Hsu, Ph.D. Beatrice C. Seegal, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Pathology

Angus C. Sampath. D.Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Professor

George A. Hashim (in Surgery). Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Azra Shahidi. M.S., Wisconsin, 1963; Ph.D., Missouri, 1967

76 NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY

Neurological Surgery

Byron Stookey Professor and Chairman

Bennett M. Stein. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., McGill, 1955

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

James W. Correll. B.A., Brown, 1941; M.D., Cornell, 19U Edgar M. Housepian. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953

Associate Professors

Joao Lubo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon, 1968

Kalmon Post. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York University, 1967

Associate Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Peter W. Carmel. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960 James G. McMurtry III. B.A., Rice, 1953; M.D., Baylor, 1957 W. Jost Michelsen. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Assistant Professor

Donald Oliver Quest. B.S., Illinois, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Assistant Clinical Professors

George L. Becker, Jr. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1950; M.D., Hahnemann, 1954 Harvey R. Nova. B.A., Brooklyn, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Ronald Brisman. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., 1965

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

iij-i r> J J- r>u T-> NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY

Wilson Raddmg, Ph.D.

David A. Kvam, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert W. Mackie. M.D., Long Island Medical College, 1 944

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY

Bruce Stephen Harris, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

James E. O. Hughes. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

Robert W. Schick (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

NEUROLOGY 77

Neurology

Henry and Lucy Moses Professor and Chairman

Lewis P. Rowland. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1948

Professors

Darryl C. DeVivo (Sidney Carter Professor) (also Pediatrics). BA., Amherst, 1959; M.D.,

Virginia, 1964 Salvatore DiMauro. M.D., Padova (Italy), 1963 Stanley Fahn (H. Houston Merritt Professor). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1955; M.D.,

California (San Francisco), 1958 Arthur Karlin (also Biochemistry). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Robert E. Lovelace. M.B.,B.S., London, 1953; M.D., 1957 James H. Schwartz (also Physiology). B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York University,

1959; Ph.D. Rockefeller, 1964 Earl A. Zimmerman. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1963

Professor of Microbiology and of Human Genetics and Development

Elvin A. Kabat. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937

Professor of Physiology

John P. Reuben. B.A., Grinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D., Florida, 1959 Professors of Clinical Neurology

Abe Chutorian (also Pediatrics). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; M.A., 1950; B.S., 1952; M.D.,

1957 Arnold Gold (also Pediatrics). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Lausanne,

1950 Eli S. Goldensohn (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., George Washington, 1937; M.D., 1940 James F. Hammill. B.S., LaSalle, 1947; M.D. Pennsylvania, 1948 Niels L. Low (also Pediatrics). M.D., South Carolina, 1940 Daniel Sciarra. B.A., Harvard 1940; M.D., 1943

Associate Professors

Lucien J. Cote (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954 Claude P.J. Chez (also Physiology). B.Sc, Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 William Allen Hauser (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Western Reserve, 1958; M.D., St.

Louis, 1962 Timothy A. Pedley. B.A., Pomona, 1965; M.D., Yale, 1969 Audrey S. Penn. B.A., Swarthmore, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Associate Professor of Neurochemistry

Hai Won Chang. B.A., Ewha (Seoul), 1950; M.A., Wellesley, 1955; Ph.D., Columbia, 1961 Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology

C. Dominique Toran-Allcrand (in International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduc- tion). B.A.. Smith, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959

Associate Professor of Clinical Neuropharmacology

Charles E. Pippenger. B.A., Ball State, 1961; M.A., 1962; Ph.D., Purdue, 1971

78 NEUROLOGY

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert E. Barrett. B.S., William and Mary, 1953; M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1957

Robert A. deNapoli. M.D., Harvard, 1954

Linda D. Lewis. B.S., Bethany, 1961; M.D., West Virginia, 1965

Joseph L. O'Brien. B.A., Princeton, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1950

Senior Research Associate

George M. Katz. E.E., Columbia, 1961; Ph.D., 1967

Assistant Professors

Gary Abrams. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1970; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1974

Arnold Eggers. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971

Daniel J. Goldberg (also Pharmacology). Ph.D., Yale, 1974

William G. Johnson. B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Columbia, 1967

Masataki Kawai. Ph.D., Princeton, 1971

Norman Latov. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1975; Ph.D., 1975

William A. Maltese. B.S., St. Francis (New York), 1972; Ph.D., Syracuse, 1977

Gajanan Nilavar. P.U.C, Madras (India), 1963; M.B.B.S., 1968

Stephen Shafer (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D.,

.Columbia, 1970 Martha M. Sorenson. B.A., Oberlin, 1963; M.S., Washington (Seattle), 1967; Ph.D., 1969 Joseph H. Willner. B.A., Hamilton College, 1966; M.D., New York, 1970 Donald Wood. B.S., Washington (Seattle), 1967; Ph.D., Washington State, 1973

Assistant Professors of Anatomy

Halina Den. B.S., Frankfurt (Germany), 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954; Ph.D.,

Michigan, 1958 Abraham B. Eastwood. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1965; M.S., Lehigh, 1967; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Terrone L. Rosenberry. B.A., Oberlin 1965; Ph.D., Oregon, 1969

Assistant Professor of Neurobiology

Eli Shapiro. B.S., Columbia, 1970; M.Phil., Yale, 1972; Ph.D., 1976

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Frank K. Boschenstein. B.A., Toronto, 1950; M.D., 1954 Theodore A. List. B.A., Kalamazoo, 1963; M.D., Michigan, 1967 Richard Mayeux. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968; M.D., 1972 Robert C. Michener. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1968; M.D., 1972 James R. Miller. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Marcclo Olarte. B.S., Marist Brothers, 1962; M.D., Cuyo, 1970 Stanley R. Resor, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Richard S. Schoenfeldt. B.A., Claremont, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Sidney Starkman. B.A., Brooklyn, 1966; M.D., Georgetown, 1970 Roger Traub. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1972

Assistant Clinical Professors

David J. Adams. B.S., Rochester, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Sarala A. Devi. M.B., Ghandi Medical (India), 1 962 Robert A. Esser. B.S., Loyola, 1941; M.D., Northwestern, 1945 Michael Fetell. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

NEUROLOGY 79

Eugenia T. Gamboa. B.A., Philippines, 1961; M.D., 1966

Mark W. Green. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1971; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Stanley W. Holstein. B.S., George Washington, 1963; M.D., Georgetown, 1967

Charles R. Plank. B.A., Oklahoma, 1961; M.D., 1965

Jerome S. Resnick. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1955; M.D., 1959

Kuldup K. Sachdev. M.B.B.S., Agre (India), 1957; M.D., Punjab, 1962

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Sidney M. Cohen, M.D. James F. Culleton, M.D. Ronald G. Emerson, M.D. Stanley Lesse, M.D. Richard S. Rhee, M.D. Bruce Roseman, M.D. Robert Wolff, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Ernest Amatniek, Ph.D. Vinayak Damle, Ph.D. Paul Oratofsky, B.A. Guy Valiquette, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Daniel A. Alkaitis, M.D. Louise Donohue, M.D. Damon M. Fellman, M.D. Michael L. Gruber, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY (continued)

Stanley L. Malkin, M.D. Alan F. Pertchik, M.D. Gerald J. Smallberg, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Jean E. Collard, M.A.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Stephen C. Klass, M.D. SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES H. Ryan Wagner, Ph.D. Leonard Zablow, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Ernest Bock, M.A. Robert D. Hawkins, Ph.D. Ruth Koehle

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued)

Peter Lau, M.A.

Angel Mozo, Ph.D.

John Paige, Ph.D.

Alfred M. Salazar, Jr., Ph.D.

Haruhide Yumiya, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS

Sara Ginsburg, Ph.D. Harry Grundfest, Ph.D. Richard L. Masland, M.D. Carmine T. Vicale, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER IN BIOCHEMISTRY

David Nachmansohn, M.D. LECTURERS

Robert E. McMasters, M.D. Jeffrey Joel Rosen, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor

William Amols. B.A., New York University, 1938; M.D., 1942 Assistant Clinical Professor

Lewis L. Hamilton. B.S., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Neurology

John CM. Brust, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Alfred C. Bannerman. B.Sc, Edinburgh, 1963; M.B.,Ch.B., 1966 Edward B. Healton. B.S., Oregon, 1964; M.D., Creighton, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professor

Bertel Bruun. M.D., Copenhagen, 1964

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Rafael Borras, M.D. William P. Duggan, M.D. Renee Malouf, M.D.

80 NEUROLOGY OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Carl W. Braun. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962 Assistant Clinical Professors

Sidney E. Bender. M.D., Toronto, 1962

Neil Lombardi (also Pediatrics). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Ann Geller, M.D.

Donald G. Rawlinson, M.D.

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Willard C. Rappleye Professor and Chairman

Raymond L. Vande Wiele (Director, International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduc- tion). M.D., Lou vain, 1947

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland), 1941; M.D., Geneva,

1957 Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (also Human Genetics). B.A., Boston, 1949;

M.D., Tufts, 1955 L. Stanley James (also Pediatrics). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948 Orlando J. Miller (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950 Allan G. Rosenfield (also Public Health) (Director, Center for Population and Family

Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Professor of Biochemistry

Seymour Lieberman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois, 1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941

Professor of Reproductive Biochemistry

Ines Mandl. Ph.D., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1949

Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Henry Clay Frick II. M.D., Columbia, 1944

W. Duane Todd. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Associate Professor of Physiology

Michel Ferin. M.D., Louvain, 1964

Associate Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Bruce A. Barron. B.A., Allegheny, 1955; Ph.D. Yale, 1965; M.D., New York University,

1971 Edward T. Bowe. B.S., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961 Harold E. Fox. M.Sc, Rochester and Oxford, 1972

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 81

Wylie C. Hembree III (also Medicine). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1964 RaphaelJewelewicz. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1960 Roy H. Petrie. B.S., Western (Kentucky), 1961; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1965 Gilbert J. Vosburgh. B.A., Princeton, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942

Associate Clinical Professors

Vincent J. Freda. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York University, 1952 Raymond U. McCaffrey. B.A., Fordham, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958 David B. Moore. B.S., Hamilton, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Senior Research Associate

Inge Dyrenfurth. B.S., Wilhelm, 1942; M.Sc, Strasbourg, 1944; B.Sc, Heidelberg, 1947

Assistant Professors

Laxmi Baxi. M.D., Seth G.S. Medical College (Bombay), 1962

Phyllis C. Leppert (also Pediatrics). M.S., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Yale, 1976

Ming-Neng Yeh. M.D., National Taiwan, 1964

Assistant Professor of Anatomy

Daniel M. Linkie. Ph.D., Michigan, 1971

Assistant Professor of Endocrine Biochemistry

Richard B. Hochberg. Ph.D., Hahnemann, 1967

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Nabil Wafik Husami. B.S., M.D., American (Beirut), 1972

Richard U. Levine. B.S., Tufts, 1962; M.D., Cornell, 1966

Kevin D. Reilly. B.S., Fairfield (Connecticut), 1965; M.D., Michigan, 1965

Harold Speert. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1935; M.D., 1939

Assistant Clinical Professors

Landis K. Crockett. B.S., Michigan State, 1966; M.D., Michigan, 1970; M.P.H., 1975 Dean J. Grandin. B.A., Columbia, 1936; M.D., 1940 Wolfgang Tretter. M.D., Heidelberg, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Charles-N. Bowers, Jr.,

M.D. Lawrence J. Severino, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Lajos Bandy, M.S. Hosea Fu-Shih Huang,

Ph.D. John Milton Hutson, M.D. Norma J. Greenfield, Ph.D. Stephen Keller, Ph.D. Henry R. Rey, M.S.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Sylvia P. Rubin, M.Sc. Moshe Israel Schwartz, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Ina N. Cholst, M.D. Feliciana Chuy, M.D. John M. Hutson, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY {continued)

Steven G. Kaali, M.D. Andrew L. Loucopoulos,

M.D. Henry A. Sellner, M.D. Pamela J. Tropper, M.D. Leonardo J. Yunis, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Margarita H. Hawkins, M.S.

82 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

STAFF ASSOCIATES SPECIAL LECTURER LECTURERS {continued)

Neil G. Anderson, Ph.D. Equinn Munnell, M.D. John L. Lewis, Jr., M.D.

Emily Glazer, M.S. Kevin B. ReiUy, M.D.

Veeramac Prasad, Ph.D. LECTURERS David L. Rosenfeld, M.D.

Sylvia Rubin, M.Sc. Richard A. Bronson, M.D. Sidney J. Siegel, M.D.

Barbara Santee M.Phil. Jerome A. Dolan, M.D. Anna L. Southam, M.D.

Arnold N. Fenton, M.D. Christopher Tietze, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Douglas H. Bams. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Balazs Selendy, M.D. Mark E. Heller, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Solan Chao. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Associate Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

HirokoT. Felton. M.D., Kansai (Japan), 1955

Jack E. Maidman. B.S., California (San Francisco), 1958; M.D., 1962

Associate Clinical Professor

Stephen L. Matseoane. B.S., Fort Hare (South Africa), 1954; M.D., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1959

Assistant Professor

Keith F. Rawlinson. B.S., M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1966

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Sunthorn Bunyaviroch. B.S., Chulalongkom (Thailand); M.D., Mahidol (Thailand)

Young Sook Cho. M.B., Yonsei, 1955; M.D., 1959

Nomenida A. Lazaro. B.S., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1960; M.D., 1965

Meredith F. Sirmans. B.S., Lincoln, 1961; M.D., Meharry, 1965

Esther S. Suarez. A. A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1955; M.D., 1960

Alfred J. Williams. B.A., Howard I960; M.D., Meharry, 1964

Assistant Clinical Professor

Pisan Unchalipongse. M.D., Chiengma Medical School (Thailand), 1965

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS {continued) ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

OBSTETRICS AND a u i *u \/i-^ t \a u n c OBSTETRICS AND

GYNECOLOGY Ashalatha Mital, M.B.,B.b. GYNECOLOGY

r- ,r . 1^1. . ».rN Rajasingham Rahulatharan, . i r> _x i \a c

Sitaram Vithal Chitnis, M.D. i^^) Angela Portale, M.S.

MiUicent Comrie, M.D. j^j^^" " ^ wQliams, M.D.

nasi Das, M.D. Jean D. Joseph, M.D.

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 83

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor

Robert S. Neuwirth (F. Huntington and Dorothy Babcock Professor). B.S., Yale, 1955; M.D., 1958

Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Thomas F. Dillon. M.D., Georgetown, 1947

Harold M. M. Tovell. B.A., Toronto, 1951; M.D., 1955

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Abraham Risk. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1957; M.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1969

Associate Clinical Professors

Hussein K. Amin. M.B., Ch.B., Alexandria (Egypt), 1955 John F. Dwyer. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960

Senior Research Associate

Muriel Feigelson. Ph.D., New York University, 1961

Assistant Professor

Michelle P. Warren (also Medicine). B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Ernst G. Bartsich. M.D., Frankfort, 1962

Terusada Horiguchi. M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1961

Hamid Mootabar. M.D., Pahlavi (Iran), 1966; M.P.H., Columbia, 1974

Haldar K. Shamsi. M.B., B.S., King Edward Medical College (Pakistan), 1965

Ivan K. Strausz. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alexander Coman. M.D., Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1948

David B. Crawford. B.S., North Carolina, 1943; M.D., New York University 1946

Emmcinuel L. Greenberg. M.D., Downstate Medical Center (Brooklyn), 1941

Ivan J. Jacobson. B.A., Belgrade (Yugoslavia), 1948; M.D., 1955

Gyula Nemes. B.A., Gymn. Szekesfehervar, 1946; M.D., Budapest, 1954

Ian G. Van Praagh. M.D., Toronto, 1955

Marcia L. Storch. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1955; M.D., Woman s Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1973 Riley W. Waller. B.S., LeMoyne, 1943; M.D., Howard, 1947

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS {continued)

OBSTETRICS AND OBSTETRICS AND ^ . . t^ r^u

GYNECOLOGY GYNECOLOGY batwant Kaur Uhamoon,

Bernardo Handszer, M.D. Farshad Agahi, M.D. d- :' ' o ' xm r\

r> 1 A -r x/ T>v -r I A J »/ r^ Bialines Espinosa, M.D.

Daniel A. Tsin, M.D. Terry L. Andrews, M.D. d tn r

IT I- o i-r A "aui G. raroqui,

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE ^^ '°Pf ^°^°' ^'^ ,, ^ M.B., B.S.

Kok Chung Chang, M.D. n i cm- \/i i-\

Malathy Sin* M.Sc, Q j ./catalog M.D. f.^, ^Kgha^n)

'^«<'="* Clare, M.D. Hakimi-Fard, M.D.

84 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY OPHTHALMOLOGY

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

John Jakus, M.D. Jay Joel Kelinson, M.D. Nicholas Klein, M.D. Gary M. Levine, M.D. Leon Lewenstein, M.D. Ezatolah Mohajer-

Shojai, M.D. Adamandia

Panayotopoulos, M.D. Benu Pascariu, M.D. Humberto Portillo, M.D. Meera Prabat, M.B., B.S. George S. Radney, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Raphael Reiss, M.D. Ronald J. Reiss, M.D. Irving Ward Robinson, M.D. Arnold Roufa, M.D. Peter S. Sailon, M.D. Bruce M.

Schiffman, M.D. Istvan Paul Tornai, M.D. Filippo Vita, M.D. Olwen Joy

Wellington, M.B., B.S. Mary E. Wilson, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Malca Sane, M.D. LECTURERS Naif K. Basile, M.D. Charles H. Debrovner, M.D. Michael Harel, M.D. Roger Hassid, M.D. Andre Nehorayoff, M.D. Robert M. Podell, M.D. Richard A. Ruskin, M.D. Fouad Surur, M.B., B.Ch.

Ophthalmology

Edward S. Harkness Professor and Chairman

Charles J. Campbell. M.D., George Washington, 1948; B.S., Muskingum, 1949; M.S., Rochester, 1951; Med.Sc.D., Columbia, 1957

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Endre A. Balazs (Malcolm P. Aldrich Professor). M.D., Budapest, 1942 Peter Gouras. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professor of Ocular Physiology

Laszlo Z. Bito. B.A., Bard, 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1963

Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

Abraham Spector. Ph.D., New York University, 1957

Professor of Microbiology

Wladyslaw Manski. M.Phil., Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw (Poland), 1951

Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Philip Knapp. B.A., Harvard, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941

Clinical Professors

Robert M. Day. B.A., Wesleyan, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1944 Ira S. Jones. B.A., Columbia, 1940; M.D., 1943

Associate Professor of Physiology

Jorge Fischbarg. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago, 1971

Associate Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Myles M. Behrens. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Richard W. Darrell. B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959; Sc.D., Columbia, 1965

OPHTHALMOLOGY 85

Andrew de Roetth, Jr. B.S., Northwestern, 1943; M.D., 1946 Anthony Donn. B.S., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952 R. Linsy Farris. M.D., Duke, 1961 Max Forbes. BA., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Chicago, 1957 Francis A. L'Esperance, Jr. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Harold F. Spalter. B.A., Brown, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Stephen Trokel. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1959; Med Sci.D., Columbia, 1965

Associate Clinical Professors

William C. Cooper. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 John W. Espy. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 George M. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Albany, 1959

Assistant Professor of Biophysical Ophthalmology

Charles J. Koester. B.S., Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1950; Ph.D., Rochester, 1955

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

James P. Dillon. B.S., Canisious College, 1964; M.S., Columbia, 1973; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Pharmacology

Prasad S. Kulkarni. B.S., Shivaji (India), 1965; M.S., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S., Miami, 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Arnold W. Forrest. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., New York University, 1942

Frank B. Hoefle. B.A., Dartmouth, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1961

Sally Moore (Orthoptics). B.S., Delaware, 1952

Balachandran D. Srinivasan. Ph.D., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1967

Emil Wirostko. B.S., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960; Med.Sc.D., Columbia, 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Hugh M. Moss. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1954 Ellen F. Regan. B.A., Wellesley, 1940; M.D., Yale, 1943

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Howard M. Eggers, M.D. William A. James, Jr., M.D. Rainer N. Mittl, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES E. Anita Anderson Ethel I. Anderson, Ph.D. Gerard Armand, Ph.D. Mary K. Cowman, Ph.D. Mary T. Flood, B.S. William H. Gamer, Ph.D. James E. Haley, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES (continued)

Lu-Ku-Li, Ph.D. Jong J. Lim, Ph.D. Kasimierz Malinowski, Ph.D. Victoria Ozanics, M.S. Debutta Roy, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Albert J. Hofeldt, M.D. Lawrence G. Pape, M.D. Louis D. Pizzarello, M.D. Jaime Santamaria 111, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Richard D. Banyard, M.D. Donald H. Green, M.D. Martin L. Leib, M.D. Richard G. Lennon, M.D. Lance D. Redler, M.D. Jesse L. Sigelman, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Suraj Prakash Bhat, Ph.D. Margaret H. Garner, Ph.D. Heinz Rosskothen Charles Weiss, M.D.

86 OPHTHALMOLOGY

STAFF ASSOCIATES Roger A. Baroody, B.A. Sarah Oliver Briller, M.Sc. Janet L. Denlinger, M.D. Maria O. Longas, B.A. Hermann D. Schubert, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS

Frank D. Carroll, M.D. George R. Merriam, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Zacharias Dische, M.D. Karl Meyer, M.D.

LECTURERS

Frank De Benedetto, Ph.D.

Frederic H. Deutsch, Ph.D. Hampson A. Sisler, Ph.D. Julius A. Vida, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Thomas A. Farrell. B.A., Hamilton, 1957; M.D., McGill, 1961

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Charies B. Deichman, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Herman C. Jordan. B.A., Colgate, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1964

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Rajendra K. Bansal, M.B., B.S. Antonio M. Gonzalez, M.D. John P. Mitchell, M.D. Ram P. Tiwari, M.S.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Andrew Goldstein, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professor

James C. Newton. B.S., Fordham, 1949; Ph.D., 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

John Eden, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Louis V. Angioletti, Jr.,

M.D. Chin Wing Chu, M.D. Bernard J. Fowler, M.D. Charles Merker, M.D. Chalermpong Sarakhun,

M.D. Howard K. Weisberg, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Ulises Arango, M.D. Philip A. Bonanno. M.D. Robert C. DellaRocca, M.D, Bruce M. Hyman, M.D. Richard S. Kochman, M.D. Thomas O. Muldoon, M.D. Robert P. Newhouse, M.D. Paul D. Satya, M.D. Morton H.

Seelenfreund, M.D.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

George Traykovski, M.D. Joseph Wynn Wesley, M.D.

LECTURERS

Dennis Freilich, M.D. Edward L. Raab, M.D.

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY 87

Orthopedic Surgery

Frank Stinchfield Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery and Chairman

Alexander Garcia. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1943

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

C. Andrew L. Bassett. M.D., Columbia, 1948; Med.Sc.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Robert E. Carroll. B.A., Yale, 1938; M.D., 1942

Harold M. Dick. B.A., Princeton, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

S. Ashby Grantham. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1952; M.D., 1955

Charles S. Neer II. B.A., Dartmouth, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1942

Charles T. Ryder. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1939; M.D., Harvard, 1943

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Austin D. Johnston. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

Associate Professor of Anatomy

Stephen Bruce Doty. B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George B. Ambrose. B.A., Columbia, 1940; M.D., 1943 Nas S. Eftekhar. M.D., Teheran, 1960

Hugo A. Keim. B.S., St. Mary's (Minnesota), 1956; M.S., Northwestern, 1966; M.D., Loyola, 1960

Associate Clinical Professor

David L. Andrews, B.A., Williams, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Senior Research Associate

Arthur A. Pilla. B.S., St. Joseph's, 1958; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1958; D.Sc., Paris, 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Robert M. Reiss. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., 1959

James N. Worcester, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Assistant Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

John R. Denton. B.S., West Point, 1960; M.D., Medical College of Alabama, 1967 Rosamond Kane. M.D., Columbia, 1952

Howard A. Kieman, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966 Christopher B. Michelsen. B.A., Bowdoin, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1969

88 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Assistant Professor of Orthopedic Biomechanics

Robert W. Pawluck. B.S., Columbia, 1974; M.B.A., 1977

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Louis U. Bigliani, M.D. Peter N. Carbonara, M.D. William U. Cavallaro, M.D. Robert N. Dunn, M.D. Merle H. Katzman, M.D. Harvey Orlin, M.D. Thomas D. Rodda, M.D. Joseph E. Salvatore, M.D. E. Baldwin Self, Jr., M.D. William A. Sinton, M.D. L. Arne Skilbred, M.D. David M. Smith, M.D. Martin L. Sorger, M.D. Joel D. Weinstein, M.D. Eric K. Zeitzmann, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Harshad R. Chokshi, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Steven Berkowitz, M.D. Stuart J. Fischer, M.D. Richard E. Fleming, Jr.,

M.D. Lawrence A. Lefkowitz,

M.D. Stephen J. Mcllveen, M.D. David Price Roye, Jr.,

M.D. Harvey S. Sicherman, M.D. Ronald Tietjen, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE George Tzitsikalakios, M.S. STAFF ASSOCIATE Sharon M. Mitchell, B.S. SPECIAL LECTURER Frank Stinchfield, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Marvin L. Shelton. B.S., Howard, 1951; M.D., 1956

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Aaron M. Gold, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

John F. Crowe, M.D. (in Surgery) William L. King, M.D. (in Surgery) John B. Nailor, M.D. (in Surgery) Germukh S. Walha, M.D. (in Surgery)

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George Van B. Cochran. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1956; Med.Sc.D., 1967 Alice L. Garrett. B.S., Washington State, 1944; M.D., Southern California, 1954

Assistant Clinical Professor

Raphael K. Levine. B.A., Brandeis, 1961; M.D., Jefferson, 1965

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Robert L. S. Boothe, M.D. Abraham C. Kovarsky, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Joseph W. Fielding. M.D., Toronto, 1946

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY OTOLARYNGOLOGY 89

Associate Clinical Professor

Robert E. Zickel. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Vincent G. Fietti, Jr. B.A., Boston, 1968; M.D., 1972 Frederic E. Helbig. B.A., Brown, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1969 Tarek Hisham Mardam-Bey. M.D., American (Beirut), 1972 Ronald M. Match. B.A., Hofstra, 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957 Andrew H. Patterson. M.D., Columbia, 1958

George L. Unis. B.A., New York University, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1975

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

William G. Hamilton, M.D. Richard J. Cea, M.D.

James C. Parkes II, M.D. Sanford A. Ratzan, M.D.

Joel E. Rothermel, M.D. Luther F. Warren, M.D.

Otolaryngology

Professor and Chairman

Maxwell Abramson. B.A., Wesleyan, 1957; M.D., Union (Albany), 1961

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Juergen Tonndorf. M.D., Kiel (Germany), 1938; Ph.D., Heidelberg, 1945

Professors of Clinical Otolaryngology

Robert M. Hui. B.A., Southern California, 1943; M.D., 1946

Robin M. Rankow. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1935; D.D.S., Columbia, 1940; M.D., Rochester, 1950

Professor of Clinical Audiology and Speech Pathology

Thomas H. Fay. B.A., Florida, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Illinois, 1958

Associate Professor of Auditory Biophysics

Shyam M. Khanna. B.Sc, Lucknow (India), 1951; D.R.E., St. Xavier College (Bombay), 1954; Ph.D., City College, 1970

Associate Clinical Professors

Frank V. Mignogna. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1965 Lawrence Savetsky. B.A., New York University, 1951; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1955 Malcolm H. Schvey. B.A., Lehigh, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., Amsterdam, 1956

90 OTOLARYNGOLOGY

Assistant Professors

Andrew Blitzer (also Oral Surgery). B.A., Adelphi, 1966; D.D.S., Columbia, 1970; M.D.,

Mt. Sinai School of Medicine (New York), 1973 Anthony Frederick Jahn. B.Sc, Toronto, 1969; M.Sc, 1970; M.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Biochemical Otolaryngology

Cheng Chun Huang. B.S., Taiwan, 1963; M.S., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., Iowa, 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology

Soly Baredes. B.A., Columbia, 1972; M.D., 1976

Assistant Clinical Professors

John D. Piro (also Prosthodontics). B.A., Fordham, 1943; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946 Raymond B. Strauss. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1950; Ph.D., Florida, 1956, M.D., Western Reserve, 1968

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Hiroshi Moriyama, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY

Vincent G. Caruso, M.D. Milton Ivker, M.D. Theodore Kramer, M.D. Arthur B. Lacher, M.D. Richard S. Mega, M.D. Daniel J. Pender, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Nicholas D. Pontilena,

M.D. William J. Richtsmeier,

M.D. Peter D. Westerhoff, M.D. Melvin Wiederkehr, M.D. Carl Wiesenthal, M.D. Howard D. Zipper, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Michel Berreby, M.D. Svetlana Kaufman, M.D. Chih-ho Lai, M.D.

LECTURER

Clarissa R. Smith, Ph.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Errol A. Thompson. M.B., University College (Dublin), 1936

Assistant Professor

Lee David Eisenberg (in Surgery). B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Clinical Professor

Ransford C. Newman. M.B.,B.S., London, 1960; F.R.C.S., Edinburgh, 1968

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professors

John S. Lewis. M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1943

Stanley Whitfield. Certificate, Harris Academy, Dundee, 1940; M.B., Ch.B., St. Andrew's University Medical School, 1946

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY

Awny Aziz Abdou, M.B.,

Ch.B. Arshad H. Amjad, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Maria Aramburu, M.D. Neville W. Carmical, M.D. James F. Grillo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Tay Bong Lee, M.D. Pi-Tang Lin, M.D. Mauriciu Rodescu, M.D.

PATHOLOGY 91

Pathology

Francis Delafield Professor and Chairman

Donald W. King. M.D., Syracuse, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Richard Axel (also Biochemistry). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 William A. Blanc. B.A., Geneva, 1940; M.D., 1947; Ph.D., 1952 Paul EUner (also Microbiology). M.S., Southern California, 1952; Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 S. Raymond Gambino. B.S., Antioch, 1948; M.D., Rochester, 1952 Gabriel C. Godman (also Microbiology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Conrad L. Pirani. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Ralph M. Richart. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Virginia Tennyson (also Anatomy). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor, 1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Professor of Microbiology

Henry J. Vogel. B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., 1949

Professor of Comparative Pathology

Ross M. Grey. D. V.M., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1945

Professors of Neuropathology

Phillip E. Duffy. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1947

Leon Roizin (in Psychiatry). B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1936

Professor of Surgical Pathology

Luciano Ozzello. M.D., Turin (Italy), 1951

Professors of Clinical Pathology

Arthur W. Branwood. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1942; M.D., 1948

Carmia Borek (in Radiology). B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weitzmann Institute (Israel), 1967

Austin D. Johnston (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

Adjunct Professors

Robert V. Hutter. B.A., State University of New York (Syracuse), 1950; M.D., 1954; M.A.,

Yale, 1968 Harry L. loachim. M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Sidney Pestka. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961

Clinical Professors

Victor Herbert. B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952 Pablo Rubinstein. M.D., Chile, 1962 Sheldon C. Sommers. M.D., Harvard, 1941

92 PATHOLOGY

Clinical Professor of Oral Pathology

Melvin N. Blake. D.D.S., New York University, 1955

Associate Professors

Cecilia M. Fenoglio. B.S., St. Elizabeth, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 John J. Fenoglio, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 John F. Nicholson (also Pediatrics). B.S., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1958

Associate Professor of Dentistry

David J. Zegarelli. B.A., Columbia, 1965; D.D.S., 1969

Associate Professors of Neuropathology

Lester M. Geller. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.A., Michigan State, 1948; Ph.D., New York

University, 1953 Mavis Kaufman (in Psychiatry). M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Associate Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Richard F. Defendini. B.A., Michigan, 1948; M.A., 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pathology

Thomas A. Blumenfeld. A.A., North Carolina, 1960; M.D., Tennessee, 1964

Arline D. Deitch (in Anatomy). B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1954

Reba A. Goodman. B.A., Indiana, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1952; Ph.D., 1955

Mary E. King. B.A., Smith, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Nicole Suciu-Foca (in Surgery). B.S., Bucharest (Rumania), 1959; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Myron Tannenbaum (in Urology). B.S., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D.,

1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961 Ruth H. Vogel. Ph.D., New York University, 1958

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatric Pathology

H. Joachim Wigger. M.D., Hamburg, 1954

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Karl Perzin. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958

Marianne Wolff. B.A., Hunter, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ernest Baden. M.A., Sorbonne, 1946; D.D.S., New York University, 1950; M.D., Geneva,

1962 Jcin Vincents Johannesen. M.D., Bergen (Norway), 1966 M. Richard Pachter. M.D., Zurich, 1956 William Pollack. M.S., Rutgers, 1950; Ph.D., 1964 Robert R. Rickert. B.A., Michigan, 1958; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1962 Harry H. Stumpf. B.A., New York University, 1947; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1951 John A. Terzakis. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 Kaity Yannopoulos. M.D., Greece, 1954 Frederick T. Zugibe. B.S., St. Francis (Illinois), 1951; M.S., Chicago, 1959; Ph.D., 1960

PATHOLOGY 93

Associate Clinical Professors

Irwin A. Almenoff. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1952

Daniel W. Benninghoff. B.A., Yale, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Donald E. Brown. M.D., Harvard, 1943

John M. Budinger. B.S., Northwestern, 1950; M.D., 1954

Robert L. Hirsch. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., 1951

David N. Silvers (also Dermatology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968

Stanley Simbonis. B.S., Yale, 1953; M.D., 1957

Harold J. Sobel. B.A., Brooklyn, 1950; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1954

Richard L. Swarm. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1949; M.D., 1950

Associate Clinical Professor of Neuropathology

Nicholas J. Willson. B.S., Saint Peter's, 1959; M.D., Seton Hall, 1963

Assistant Professors

Jerome Owen Cantor. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1975

Christopher P. Crum. B.A., Virginia, 1970; M.D., 1974

Seth Goldberg. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1966; B.A., California, 1964;

M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1970 Stephen Keller. B.S., Pace, 1971; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Daniel M. Knowles. B.A., Bridgeport, 1969; M.D., Chicago, 1973 Jay Lefkowitch. B.A., Clark, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976 Charles C. Marboe. B.A., Princeton, 1971; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1976 Merlin D. Marquardt (in Opthalmology and Pathology). B.S., Wisconsin, 1967; M.D., 1971 Ricardo Mesa-Tcjada. B.S., Manhattan, 1964; M.D., Madrid, 1970 Armand Miranda. B.S., Columbia, 1969; Ph.D., 1973 Neelavathy Pushparaj. M.B.B.S., Stanley Medical College (India), 1961 Janet Tannenbaum. B.A., Brandeis, 1969; Ph.D., Columbia, 1975

Assistant Professor of Neuropathology

Arthur P. Hays. B.A., Dartmouth, 1962; B. Med. Sci., 1963; M.D., Colorado, 1966

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Herbert Barden. B.S., Brooklyn, 1952; M.S., New York University, 1960; Ph.D., 1964

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pathology

E. Glenn Armstrong. B.S., Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1966; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., Mary- land 1975

Daniel J. Fink. B.S., Cornell, 1968; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1975; M.Phil., 1980

Gerda Nette. B.S., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., 1973

Michael Pesce. B.S., St. Johns, 1967; Ph.D., 1971

Maria Mahdalyna Shevchuk. B.A, Fordham, 1970; M.D., Upstate Medical Center (Syra- cuse), 1974

Philip Tomashefsy (in Urology). Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Solcuige G. Abunassar. M.D., American (Beirut), 1968

Majid Ali. M.B., B.S., Punjab (India), 1963

Paul Bachner. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

94 PATHOLOGY

Harry Woodson Carter. M.D., Harvard, 1957

Larry E. Douglass. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1959; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1960 Howard B. Goldstein. B.A., Colgate, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959 Arthur I. Hurvitz. D. V.M., Michigan State, 1964; Ph.D., California (Davis), 1967 Catherine Kambolis. M.D., Athens, 1955

Paul A. Krieger. B.S., City College, 1967; M.D., New York Medical College, 1971 Richard A. McReynolds. M.S., Virginia, 1968; M.D., 1971 Basil Moumgis. M.D., Pittsburgh, 1949

Frederick Muschenheim. B.A., Howard, 1953; M.D.C.M., McGill, 1963 Robert D. Newman. 5.5., California (Los Angeles), 1958; M.D., 1962 Joseph E. O'Brien. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961

Assistant Clinical Professors

Giles G. Allard. B.A., Montreal, 19U; M.D., Laval, 1950

Lucretia Allen. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1952 Ada B. DeChabon. B.S., Liceo Senoritas, 1949; M.D., Buenos Aires, 1957 Stefan E. Epstein. B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., State University of New York (Buffalo),

1960 Michael Kogan. Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1972 Hiroshi Nakazawa. M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1958

Henry G. Schriever. B.A., Vermont, 1956; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960 Ralph W. Snyder. B.S., McGill, 1951; M.D., 1953 Heidrun Zweitnig-Rotterdam. M.D., Munich, 1968

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

May Parisien, M.D. RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Reba Goodman, Ph.D. David J. Pierson, M.S. Moshe Rosen, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

James W. Allen, M.D. Julianne M. Byrne, Ph.D. Marguerite M. Duby, M.D. Milagros Ona-Sarino, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Ranjit Kaur Sachdev,

M.B.B.S. Monica C. Yang, M.D. Elena Zegarelli-Schmidt,

Ph.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Margaret M. Grimes, M.D. Charles Chostner Marboe, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Elena Agranovsky, M.D., Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Lester R. Cahn, D.D.S. David Cowen, M.D. C. Zent Garber, M.D. Raffaele Lattes, M.D. Meyer M. Melicow, M.D. Abner Wolf, M.D.

LECTURERS Michael Baden, M.D. Paul A. Brown, M.D. Hyman Donnenfeld, M.D. Frederick A. Jacobiec, M.D. Janis F. Klavins, M.D. David Spain, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Charles A. Ashley. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D, 1947; M.S., Illinois, 1951 Assistant Clinical Professor

Harlan D. Alpern. B.S., Michigan, 1967; M.D., Chicago, 1971

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

Charles A. Ellsworth William B. Giuney, M.D.

PATHOLOGY 95

At Harlem Hospital

Professor

Jack W. C. Hagstrom. B.A., Amherst, 1955; M.D., Cornell, 1959

Associate Clinical Professors

Prem Chauhan. F. Sc. Med., Punjab (India), 1942; M.D., B.S., 1948 Carlos Navarro. B.S., National University (Mexico), 1947; M.D., 1955 Angus C. Sampath (in Microbiology). D. Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

Associate Professor of Medicine

Clayton L. Natta. B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1957; M.D., Toronto, 1961

Assistant Clinical Professor

Helen M. S. Richards. M.B., B.S., Colombo (Sri Lanka), 1969 INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

Luritz C. Creque, M.D. Juan B. Gabriel, Jr., M.D. Louys Thomas, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Jerry Rothenberg. M.D., Medical College of Georgia, 1964

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professor

Bernard M. Wagner. M.D., Hahnemann, 1949

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Robert Galen. B.A., Boston, 1966; M.D., 1970

Associate Clinical Professor

Alberto Elguerzabal. M.D., Salamanca (Spain), 1952

Assistant Clinical Professors

Steven L. Goldberg. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1968

Anthony Marchand. B.A., Connecticut, 1966; M.D., Duke, 1970

Joel A. Roth. B.A., Brooklyn, 1964; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1968

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Frederick van Lente, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Stephen F. Ryan. M.D., Colorado, 1961

96 PATHOLOGY PEDIATRICS

Professor of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Robert R. Pascal. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., 1962

Associate Clinical Professors

John Y. Kiyasu. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1951; Ph.D., 1955

Artemis D. Nash. B.A., Smith, 1949; M.D., Columbia 1953

Louise L. Phillips. B.S., William and Mary, 1934; M.D., Columbia, 1940; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Clinical Professors

Lazarevic Bozidar. M.D., Belgrade, 1956

John J. Di Re. B.S., McGill, 1953; M.D., George Washington, 1957

Harold P. Gaetz. B.S., McGill, 1953; M.D, 1958

Martin S. Krumerman. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D, 1965

Corazon Sian. B.A., Santo Thomas, 1958; M.D., 1963

Assistant Professor

Deng Fong Liau. M.Sc, McGill, 1968; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pathology

Kenneth F. Button. B.A., Indiana, 1966; M.D., 1970 Derek Englander. M.D., Royal College (London), 1963

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

Petra Elena P. Banogon, M.D. Vijni Katatikarn, M.D. Rose-Sunitha Thayaparan, M.D. Mah Manzar Yamohommady, M.D.

Pediatrics

Reuben S. Carpentier Professor and Chairman

Michael Katz (also Public Health). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Arthur D. Bloom (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D.,

New York University, 1960 Ralph Dell. B.A., Pomona, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961 Darryl C. De Vivo (also Neurology). B.A., Amherst, 1959; M.D., Virginia, 1964 Welton M. Gersony. B.A., Syracuse, 1954; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1958 L. Stanley James (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948 Robert B. Mellins. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D, Johns Hopkins, 1952 Sergio Piomelli. B.A., Liceo Sannazzaro (Naples), 1948; M.D., Naples, 1954

PEDIATRICS 97

Myron Winick (Williams Professor and Director of Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A..

Columbia, 1951; M.S., Illinois, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1956 Robert W. Winters. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., Yale, 1952

Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Abe Chutorian (also Neurology). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; B.S., 1952; M.D., 1957

Arnold R. Gold (also Neurology). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Lausanne,

1950 Sylvia P. Griffiths. B.A., Hunter, 1944; M.D., Yale, 1948 Jerry C. Jacobs. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1956 Niels L. Low (also Neurology). M.D., South Carolina, 1940 David Shaffer (also Psychiatry). M.D., London, 1961 Joe D. Wray (in Public Health). B.A., Stanford, 1947; M.D., 1952

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

H. Donald Dunton. M.D., Rochester, 1945

Clinical Professor of Pediatric Psychology

Michael Lewis. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1958; Ph.D., 1962

Associate Professors

Jo Anne Brasel (in Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Colorado. 1956; M.D.. 1959 Nicholas Cunningham (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1955 Joseph Graziano (also Pharmacology). B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971 William C. Heird. B.S., Maryville, 1958; M.S., Vanderbilt, 1963; M.D., 1964 Allen I. Hyman (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College,

1959 Ehud Krongrad. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1965 Gilbert W. Mellin. B.S., Bethany, 1945; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949 Akira Morishima. M.D., Keio (Japan), 1954; Ph.D., 1961 John F. Nicholson (also Pathology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1958 Pedro Rosso (in Obstetrics and Gynecology and Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D., Chile,

1966 David Rush (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard 1955; M.D., 1959 Katherine Sprunt. B.A., Wellesley, 1942; M.D.. Johns Hopkins, 1945

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Russell S. Asnes. B.A., Boston, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1963

Jennifer J. Bell. B.A., Swarthmore, 1953; M.D., New York, 1961

William J. Davis. B.A., Wilkes, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

John M. Driscoll. B.A., Hamilton, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1962

David Hodes (also Microbiology). B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Anthony Mansell. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., Ohio State, 1965

Martin Nash. B.A., Duke, 1960; M.D., 1964

Jane Pitt. B.A., Radcliffe, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964

Anneliese L. Sitarz. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Carl N. Steeg. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1962

Dorothy Warburton (in Human Genetics and Development). Ph.D., McGill, 1961

98 PEDIATRICS

Associate Clinical Professors

Fred Agre. B.A., Lafayette, 1957; M.D., Duke, 1961

Robert Appleby. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

William A. Bauman. B.S., Harvard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Constance J. Hayes. B.S., St. Rose, 1959; M.D., Loyola, 1965

John J. Kangos. B.S., Rutgers, 1945; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1948

Jack Shiller. B.A., North Carolina, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Joseph A. Silverman. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Leo F. J. Wilking. B.S., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Assistant Professors

Kwame Anyane-Yeoba. M.D., Ghana, 1972

Stephen J. Atwood. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Frederick Bierman. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1969; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1973 Vincent Bonagura. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975 Dennis Davidson. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963 Candace Jean Erickson. B.A., George Washington, 1969; M.D., Maryland, 1973 Gabriel G. Haddad. B.S., American (Beirut), 1969; M.D., 1972 Karen Hein. B.A., Wisconsin, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Joseph S. Levy. M.D., Hadassah (Israel), 1971 Adrien Moessinger. M.D., Lausanne, 1971 Emi Okamoto. M.D., Columbia, 1973 Nigel Paneth (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D.,

Harvard, 1972; M.P.H., Columbia, 1978 Leila M. Pang (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1970 Joan A. Regan. M.D., Missouri, 1974 Tove Rosen. B.A., Rochester, 1961; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1965 Philip Rosenthal. B.S., State University of New York, 1971; M.D., 1975 Karl F. Schulze. B.A., Carleton, 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1965 Robert L. Seigle. B.A., Northwestern, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974 S. Alex Stalcup. B.A., Whittier College, 1967; M.D., California, 1971 Raymond I. Stark. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1970 Shobhana Vora. M.D., Bombay (India), 1973 Christine Ann Walsh. M.D., Yale, 1973 Michael. A. Weiner. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1968; M.D., State University of New York

[Upstate), 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Bernard R. Feldman. B.S., William and Mary, 1955; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1959 Charles Feldman. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1970 William Gerba. B.S., Fordham, 1971; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974 Burton Grebin. B.A., Adelphi, 1962; M.D., New York Medical College, 1966 Donald E. Hutchings (also Psychiatry). B.A., Lake Forest, 1959; M.A., Chicago, 1963;

Ph.D., 1965 Matilde Irigoyen. B.S., Military Lycecum (Buenos Aires), 1965; M.D., Buenos Aires, 1971 Celia Ores. M.D., Berne (Switzerland), 1956

PEDIATRICS 99

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rose G. Ames. B.A., Barnard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Alexander Blum, Jr. B.S., Yale, 19U; M.D., Harvard, 1947

Frederick M. Bomback. B.A., Brandeis, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College, 1969

Matilda B. Brust. B.A., Marietta, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

Roger Challop. B.S., Brooklyn, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

Yvonne T. DriscoU. B.A., Trinity, 1958; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1962 T. Donald Eisenstein. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1952; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1956 Marguerite J. Gates. B.A., Barnard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Gustave Gavis. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Thurman B. Givan, Jr. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Stephen Glaser. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Bertram H. Grossman. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Georgetown, 1959 Jeannette J. Jansky. M.S., City College, 1960; Ph.D., Columbia, 1970 Kenneth H. Katz. B.A., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., New York Medical College, 1973 Murray D. Kuhr. B.S., Cincinnati, 1961; M.D., Chicago, 1965 Betty C.M.L. Kuo. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964 George Lazarus. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Dean N. Martin. B.A., Hofstra, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1963 Harriet E. McGurk. B.A., R^dcliffe, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973 Daniel J. Melia. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1949 Harriette R. Mogul. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1965 Damyanti Moorjani (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant (Bom- bay), 1957 Gilda Morillo-Cucci. M.D., Phillipines, 1962; M.P.H., Columbia, 1975 Stanley Morrison. B.A., Temple, 1963; M.D., George Washington, 1967 Michael Novogroder. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1969 Herbert Poch. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953 Morton H. Rachelson. B.A., Syracuse, 1946; M.D., Tulane, 1950 Margaret M. Rice. B.S., Marymount, 1943; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Roderick C. Richards. B.A., Cornell, 1945; M.D., 1948 Louis Rodregues. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1959 Albert P. Rosen. B.B., North Carolina, 1939; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1943 John S. Rosmaita. B.A., St. Peter's, 1953; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1957 Malcolm S. Schwartz. D.D., College of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery, 1967 Edith M. J. Kuo-Ying Shen. M.D., Ludwig-Maximilian (Munich), 1960 Kung-Tso Sheng. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai), 1954 Elliot J. Siegel. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1954; M.D., 1968 Gilbert Simon. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Rochester, 1962 William H. Smith. B.A., Rochester, 1941; M.D., 1944 Susan Speer. B.A., Wellesley, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972 David Stiles. B.A., Harvard 1940; M.D., 1943 Martin B. Vita. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., 1954

William W. Whitten. B.A., Wesleyan, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 David Wisotsky. B.S., City College, 1970; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

Edwin A. Goldstein. B.A., Brooklyn College, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958

100 PEDIATRICS

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Lilian Wah-Ying Chiu,

M.D. Maryann J. Colenda, M.D. John L. Costa, M.D. Alan Kanter, M.D. Peter F. Migel, M.D. Robert M. Schwartz, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES William B. BeU, M.D. David Evans, Ph.D. Helen Johnson, Ph.D Grace Leidy, M.D. Frank T. Nakamura, B.S. Rajasekhar

Ramakrishnan, Sc.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Martha L. Amarant, M.D. Gaya Aranoff, M.D. Betty Chang, M.D. William J. Chernack, M.D. Michele Denize, M.D. Agnes D. Dilworth, M.S.S. Arlene Falk, M.D. Bernadette Piscina, M.D. Stanley H. Gilbert, Jr.,

M.D. Nora Haddad-Farkouh,

M.D. Robert A. Hands, M.D. Patrick Hicks-Hartman,

M.D. Marie B. Keith, M.D. Michael L. Lapkin, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) William L. Lupatkin, M.D. Sylvia Morgan, M.D. Marilyn Nosh, M.D. Mary R. Richards, M.D. Steven Selbst, M.D. Morton J. Seligman, M.D. John G. Slater, M.D. D. Loren Southern, M.D. Nikki Lynn Temkoa, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Alma T. Blitz, M.D.

Knang-Chung Chien, M.D.

Bernard Etra, M.D.

Matheu; Feldman, M.D.

Rosalinda Rubenstein,

M.D. Susan Skalsky, M.D. Samuel T. Wilmit, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Carol Seaman, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Fred S. Barash, M.D.,

Ph.D. Bruce Beeber, M.D. Linda D'Angelo, M.S. Steven Elias, M.D. Mysore R. Gandhi, M.S. Ludovico Guarini, M.D. Michael Koch, Ph.D. Dorcas Koeningsberger,

M.S. Joel S. Lipset, M.A. Anita Lustenberger, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES [continued) Dolores McCann, M.S. Ernest J. Millman, Ph.D. Catherine Muttart, M.S. Cheryl L. Nagel, M.S. Takayuki Nogawa, M.D. Ulana Sanocka, M.D. Regina Santella, M.S. Robin Schwartz, M.S. Thomas Soulos, M.S. Mark D. Starr, Ph.D. Phyllis Taterka, M.S. Piper Weldy, B.A. Alan Zubrow, M.D. Christine L. Zucker, M.S.

SPECIAL LECTURER James A. Wolff, M.D.

LECTURERS Albert Aharon, M.D. Armond V. Mascia, M.D. Yaakov Shechter, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Joe H. Cannon. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1942; M.D., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS Allan S. Cunningham, M.D. Pedro DeAlarcon, M.D. John G. Freehafer, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor

Margaret Heagerty. 1961

B.A., Seton Hill, 1957; B.S., West Virginia, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania,

PEDIATRICS 101

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Wiener Leblanc. B.S., Haiti, 1950; M.D., 1956

Gene- Ann Polk. B.A., Oberlin, 1948; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1952; M.P.H., Columbia, 1958

Assistant Professors

Ilene Fennoy. B.A., Stanford, 1968; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1973 Mark Rapoport. B.A., M.D., Boston, 1970; M.P.H., Howard, 1973

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Araceli R. Ancajas. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1961

Josephine Kerr. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., New York University, 1951

Yusuf M. Khakoo. M.B., B.S., Bombay, 1962

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning. B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1949

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS INSTRUCTORS [continued]

Beverly Anderson, M.D. Petronella Manning-Allegre, M.D.

Viruppamattam Augustin, M.B., B.S. Rochelle Scott, M.D.

David Bateman, M.D. Marguerita A. Silvera, M.D.

Serge Fenelon, M.D. Claudina Y. Wallace, M.D. Wilfrid Florvil, M.D.

Delore J. Gayle-Thompson, M.D. Anne Hutcheon, M.A., M.D. Robert Hutcheon, M.D. Vincent E. Hutchinson, M.B., B.S.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PEDL^TRICS

Anne Hutcheon, M.A., M.D. ' Kuang-Chung Hu Chien, M.D.

Robert Hutcheon, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Stephen F. Wang. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Robert Komblum. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1962 Lawrence M. Skolnick. B.A., Queens (New York), 1968; M.D., New York University, 1972;

M.P.H, North Carolina, 1980

At Overlook Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

Solomon J. Cohen. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1951 Gloria Schrager. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1948

102 PEDIATRICS

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joseph I. Boylan. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Yale, 1955

Frederick C. Braun, Jr. B.S., Georgetown, 1951; M.D., Jefferson, 1955

Howard S. Britt. B.A., Boston, 1970; M.D., 1970

Burton M. Feinsmith. B.S., Arkansas, 1949; M.S., Florida, 1951; M.D., Berne, 1961

Benjamin H. Josephson. B.S., North Carolina, 1949; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

Joseph Kalbacher. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Cornell, 1946

John H. Krikorian. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1963

Carolkay Lissenden. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Woman 's Medical College of Philadel- phia, 1964

Lewis I. Sank. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1957; M.D., 1961

Frederic A. Schulaner. B.S., Tufts, 1955; M.D., 1959

Margaret E. Symonds. M.B., London, 1941; B.S., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Paul Avondoglio, M.D. Arnold N. Constad, M.D. Paul A. Kearney, M.D. Barry Lauton, M.D. Wayne D. Stettler, M.D. Charles B. Terhune, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Frank P. Frenda, M.D.

Carl H. Herman, M.D.

Alexander R. Horowitz,

M.D. Victor S. Lamberto, M.D. Bharati S. Mullick, M.D. Vinnakota V. P. Rao, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Dudley A. Roberts, M.D. Stanislawa Rosnowski,

M.D. Arvind P. Shah, M.D. James Sorger, M.D. John F. Vigorita, M.D. Sandy P. Waran, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Pediatrics

Louis Z. Cooper. B.S., Yale, 1954; M.D., 1957

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Susan G. Gordon. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1946; M.D., Howard, 1950 Doris L. Wethers. B.S., Queens (New York), 1958; M.D., Yale, 1952

Associate Clinical Professors

Helen Rodriguez-Trias. B.S., Puerto Rico, 1957; M.D., 1960 Phillip R. Ziring. B.A., New York University, 1958; M.D., 1962

Assistant Professor

Elena B. Klein. M.D., State Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1953; Ph.D., Institute of Microbiology (Rumania), 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatric Psychology

Madeline W. Appell. B.A., Queens, 1962; M.A., 1963

Jeanne Brooks-Gunn. B.A., Connecticut College, 1969; Ed.M., Harvard, 1970; Ph.D.,

Pennsylvania, 1975 Nathan A. Fox. B.A., Williams, 1970; Ph.D., Harvard, 1975

PEDIATRICS PHARMACOLOGY 103

Assistant Clinical Professors

Dennis Allendorf. B.S., Georgetown, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College, 1970

Anastasios Anastasiades. M.D., Athens, 1950

Robert Antar. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1970

Saroj Sahgal Bakshi. M.B., B.S., Government Medical College (India), 1960; M.D., Institute

of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (India), 1969 Chhaya Chakrabarti. B.Sc, Calcutta, 1963; M.D., 1969 Herbert I. Cohen. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

Gisela T. Dalrymple. M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1951 Ragabardial R. Dwarka. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1969 Donald L. Feinberg. B.A., Hamilton, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949 Joan M. Flanigan. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1962; M.D., 1966 Erwin Friedman (Pediatric Psychology). Ph.D., Peter (Budapest), 1949 Fadel M. Hochroth. B.A., Louisville, 1953; M.D., 1957 Harry Kimmel. B.A., St Andrews (Bucharest), 1940; M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Katherine Lodyjensky. M.D., Montreal, 1943 Neil Lombardi (also Neurology). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967 Rogelio F. Lucas. A. A., University of the East (Manila), 1956; M.D., 1961 Anthony F. Michel. MD., Faculte de Medecine (Haiti), 1956 Mona Milstein. B.A., State University of New York (Binghamton), 1965; M.D., State

University of New York (Buffalo), 1969 Richard Mones. B.A., Brooklyn, 1967; M.D., New York Medical College, 1971 Marianne Schwob. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Farrokh Shahrivar. M.D., Tehran, 1966 Shantha Subramaniam. M.B., B.S., Madras (India), 1962 Lucy M. Swift. B.A., Barnard, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Phienjit Tantibhedhyangkul. M.D., Mahido (Thailand), 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Sayenna A. Uduman. D.M.E.S., Kilpauk (India), 1963; M.D., Madras, 1966 Ranjeet Virdi. B.S., India, 1960; M.D., 1960 Elizabeth Watkins. B.A., Randolph-Macon Women's College, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Ricarda L. Baum, M.D. Renata Frenkel, M.D. Diane Hochlerin, M.D. Nancy Holahan, M.D. Ruth E. Kessler, M.D. Kusum Khanna, M.B.B.S. Priscilla W. Lewis, M.D. Edward A. Nichols, M.D. Flora Ramirez, M.D. Thelma Verano-Santiago, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS

Robert William Amler, M.D.

Carlois Emilio Arzeno, M.D.

William R. Brown, M.D.

Myrna Aquino Damien,

M.D. Morel Duverseau, M.D. Luis Antonio Goyco, M.D. Robert L. Hite, M.D. Thomas H. Hyatt, Jr., M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Christodoulos lordanou,

M.D. Richard Gary Merkler, M.D. Melanie Rivenzon, M.D. Nathan E. Saint-Amand,

M.D. Michael Glen Teitel, M.D. Steven Tsoutsouras, M.D.

Pharmacology

David Hosack Professor and Chairman

Brian F. Hoffman. A.A., Princeton, 1943; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1947

Professors

J. Thomas Bigger, Jr. (also Medicine). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Frederick G. Hofmann. B.A., Michigan, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1952

104 PHARMACOLOGY

Norman Kahn (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1954; D.D.S., 1958; Ph.D.,

1964 Harold C. Neu (also Medicine). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Anesthesiology). M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1944 Michael R. Rosen (also Pediatrics). B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1964 Wilbur H. Sawyer (Gustavus and Louise Pfeiffer Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D.,

1945; Ph.D., 1950 Hsueh-Hwa Wang. M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1 946 Andrew L. Wit. B.S., Bates, 1963; Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Adjunct Professors

Paul F. Cranefield. Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1946; Ph.D., 1951; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964

Jurg Schneider. M.D., Basle (Switzerland), 1945

Sidney Spector (also Anesthesiology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jefferson,

1956 Robert M. Weiss. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1957; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1960

Associate Professor

Joseph Graziano (in Pediatrics). B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Adjunct Associate Professors

Marvin R. Blumenthal. B.S., Michigan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949 Martin M. Winbury. B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.S., Maryland, 1942; Ph.D., New York University, 1954

Senior Research Associate

Lance L. Simpson. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., California, 1969

Assistant Professors

Larry Crawshaw (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1964; Ph.D.,

California (Santa Barbara), 1970 Kenneth Dangmein. Ph.D., Columbia, 1977 Peter Danilo, Jr. Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Daniel J. Goldberg. Ph.D., Yale, 1974 Jaya Haldar. M.Sc, Calcutta, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1966 Douglas N. Ishii (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959 Lou Katz (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959 Tucin Due Pham (also Anatomy). B.S., St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S., Loyola, 1967;

M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 Richard B. Robinson. Ph.D., Illinois, 1975

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Edward B. Kirsten. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., New York University, 1966;

Ph.D., City College, 1969 Lawrence Tilley. D. V.M., Iowa State, 1969

PHARMACOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY 105

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

Samuel M. Ross, B.E.E. (Electrical Engineering)

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Arline Albala, B.A. Pamela Garlick, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Ofer Binah, Ph.D. Penelope Altman Boyden,

Ph.D. Florence Chan, M.D. William Eng, B.S. Irinia Golyakhovsky, Ph.D. Kenneth W. Hewett,

Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued) Arthur Hoffmeyer Iris Nemhauser, M.A. Jorg Dietrich Schoenen, M.D.

LECTURER

Kwang Soo Lee, M.D.

Physiology

John C. Dalton Professor and Chairman

John V. Taggart (also Medicine). M.D., Southern California, 1940

Professors

Shu Chien. M.B., National Taiwan, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957

Eric R. Kandel (also Psychiatry). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

Irving Kupfermann (also Psychiatry). Ph.D., Chicago, 1964

William L. Nastuk. B.S., Rutgers, 1939; Ph.D., 1945

Mero Nocenti. B.A., West Virginia, 1951; M.S., 1952; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955

John P. Reuben (in Neurology). B.A., Grinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D., Florida,

1959 David Schachter. B.S., New York University, 1946; M.D., 1949 James H. Schwartz (also Neurology). B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York University,

1959; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1964

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Medicine). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1962

Martin Blank. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D.,

Cambridge, 1959 Louis J. Cizek. B.S., Fordham, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1941 Raimond Emmers. B.A., East Texas Baptist, 1953; M.A., North Carolina, 1955; Ph.D.,

Syracuse, 1958 Michel Ferin (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Louvain, 1964 Jorge Fischbcirg (in Ophthalmology). M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago, 1971 Claude P. J. Ghez (also Neurology). B. Sc, Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964

Senior Research Associates

John D. Koester. B.A., Wooster (Ohio), 1965; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Shunichi Usami. M.B., Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine (Japan), 1940; Ph.D., 1957

Assistant Professors

Kung-Ming Jan. M.B., National Taiwan, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971

Herbert H. Lipowsky. M.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1968; Ph.D., California (San

Diego), 1975 Hugh Nellans (also Medicine). B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971

106 PHYSIOLOGY PSYCHIATRY

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATES

Richard E. Abbott, Ph.D. Dean Handley, Ph.D.

Jack T. Alexander, B.S. Robert G. King, B.Sc.

Ronald D. Carlin, Ph.D. Lily M. Soo, Ph.D. Szloma Kowarski, M.A. Mary M. L. Lee, Ph.D.

Psychiatry

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Acting Chairman

Sidney Malitz. B.S., Tidane, 1943; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1946

At New York State Psychiatric Institute

Professors

Eric R. Kandel (also Physiology). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Donald F. Klein. B.A., Colby, 1947; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1952 Irving Kupferman (also Physiology). Ph.D., Chicago, 1964 Edward J. Sachar (Laurence Kolb Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania,

1956 Robert L. Spitzer. B.A., Cornell, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957 Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Professor of Biochemistry

Maurice M. Rapport. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1946

Professors of Medical Psychology

Samuel Sutton. Ph.D., Chicago, 1955 William N. Thetford. Ph.D., Chicago, 1949

Professor of Neuropathology

Leon Roizin. B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1936

Professor of Social Sciences

Bruce Dohrenwend (also Public Health). B.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Cornell, 1955

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gene G. Abel. M.D., Iowa, 1965

H. Donald Dunton (in Pediatrics). M.D., Rochester, 1945

L. Erlenmeyer-Kimling (in Human Genetics). B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1960

Ronald R. Fieve. B.A., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1955

Archie R. Foley (in Public Health). B.A., Queens (Canada), 1943; M.D., CM., 1947; M.S.,

Columbia, 1962 Lothar Gidro-Frank. M.D., Columbia, 1948 Alexander H. Glassman. B.A., Illinois, 1956; M.D., 1958 Murray Glusman. B.S., New York University, 1934; M.D., 1938

PSYCHIATRY 107

Barry K. Gurland. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1955

Joseph Jaffe. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., New York University. 1947

Donald S. Kornfeld. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1950; M.D.. Yale, 1954

John D. Rainer (in Human Genetics). M.D., Columbia, 1951

James H. Ryan. B.A., Yale, 1952; M.D.. Harvard, 1956

David Shaffer (also Pediatrics). M.D., London, 1961

John Weber. B.A., Duke, 1939; M.D., Yale, 1943

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner (in Public Health). B.A., Harvard 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Professors of Clinical Psychology

Anke Ehrhardt. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1969

Rachel Gittleman-Klein. B.A., College of the City of New York. 1957: Ph.D.. Columbia. 1966

Clinical Professors

Willard Gaylin. B.A., Harvard, 1947; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1951 Roger MacKinnon. M.D., Columbia, 1950

Lionel Ovesey. B.A., California (San Francisco). 1937; M.D., 1941 Ethel Person. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University. 1960

Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

Rita Rudel. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1946; M.A., 1949; Ph.D.. New York University, 1955

Associate Professor of Dentistry

Austin H. Kutscher. B.A., New York University, 1945; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946

Associate Professor of Medical Psychology

Jacques Rutschmann. D. Sc, Geneva, 1956

Associate Professor of Neuropathology

Mavis Kaufman. M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Associate Professor of Public Health (Sociomedical Sciences)

Denise Kandel. Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurobiology and Behavior

Vincent F. Castellucci. B.A., Uval, 1960; B.Sc., 1964; Ph.D.. Washington (St. Louis). 1968

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurochemistry

Hadassah Tamir. M.S., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1955; Ph.D.. Israel Institute of Technology, 1959

108 PSYCHIATRY

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Liselotte Graf. M.D., Vienna, 1937

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Ruth Bennett. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962 Jerrold S. Maxmen. B.A., Wayne State, 1963; M.D., 1967

Frederic M. Quitkin. B.A., Princeton, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1962

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychology

Judith V. Becker. M.S., Eastern Washington State, 1968; Ph.D., Southern Mississippi^

1975 W. Crawford Clark. Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Jean Endicott. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967 Heino F.L. Meyer-Bahlburg. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1970

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychopharmacology

Thomas Cooper. M.A., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1970 James M. Perel. Ph.D., New York University, 1964

Associate Clinical Professors

Paul A. Bradlow. M.D., Hahnemann, 1946

Richard G. Druss. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Gloria Faretra. M.D., Georgetown, 1952

Kenneth Frank. M.S., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., 1967

Richard A. Gardner. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956

Rodman Gilder, Jr. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Stanley Heller. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Winslow R. Hunt. B.A., M.A., Chicago, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Samuel Klagsbrun. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1955; B.R.E., Jewish Theological

Seminary; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1962 Alexander N. Levay. M.D., Rochester, 1957 Robert S. Liebert. B.S., Syracuse, 1951; M.A., Clark, 1956; M.D., New York University,

1960 Mary C. MacKay. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1959

Donald I. Meyers. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1946; M.D., Jefferson, 1950 Helen C. Meyers. B.A., Hunter, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949 John F. O'Connor. B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Seymour Post. M.D., New York University, 1947 Daniel Shapiro. M.D., Illinois, 1945

Leonard M. Sheehy. B.A., Harvard I960; M.D., McGill, 1968 Henry 1. Spitz. B.A., Lafayette (Pennsylvania), 1961; M.D., New York Medical College,

1965 Bluma Swerdloff. D.S. W., Columbia, 1960 Ralph N. Wharton. M.D., Columbia, 1957

Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatric Social Work

Winifred Winikus. M.S., Columbia, 1949

PSYCHIATRY 109

Assistant Professors

Craig H. Bailey (also Anatomy). B.A., Lehigh, 1967; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., 1973 Samuel M. Schacher (also Biochemistry). B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.A., 1974; Ph.D., 1976 Klaudiusz Weiss (also Biochemistry) (in Dentistry). M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony Brook), 1973

Assistant Professors of Biochemistry

George Alexander. B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953 Herbert L. Meltzer. B.S., Long Island, 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurobiology

Thomas J. Carew. M.A., California (Riverside), 1967; Ph.D., 1970

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gregory Asnis. B.S., Dickinson College, 1968; M.D., Hahnemann, 1972

Miron Baron. M.D., Tel Aviv, 1972

Jerry Finkel. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

David V. Forrest. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

David Friedman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1965; Ph.D., City University of New York,

1972 Abby Joy Fyer. B.A., Reed, 1969; M.D., New York University, 1973 Madelyn S. Gould. B.S., City University of New York, 1972; M.A., Princeton, 1974;

M.P.H., Columbia, 1976; M. Phil., 1980 Laurence L. Greenhill. B.A.,. Columbia, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967 Kenneth Greenspan. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963 Frederick Kass. B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 Michael R. Liebowitz. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., 1969 Patrick J. McGrath. B.S., Seton Hall, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974 Joaquim Puig-Antich. B.A., LaSalle Bonanova (Spain), 1960; M.D., Barcelona (Spain),

1967 Ronald O. Rieder. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., 1968 Steven Paul Roose. B.A. Harvard, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1974 Lawrence Sharpe. D.P.M., London, 1961 Andrew Skodol. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1971 Bernard T. Walsh. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Harvard, 1972 Daniel T. Williams. B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Cornell, 1969 Stuart C. Yudofsky. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Baylor, 1970

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychology

Edward Scott Charles. B.A., City University of New York, 1965; M.A., 1968; M.A., New

School for Social Research, 1971 Miriam Cohen. B.A., Michigan, 1961; M.S., Pittsburgh, 1964; Ph.D., 1967 Donald J. Dillon. Ph.D., Fordham, 1955 Helen Hanesia. B.S., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1953; M.A., Columbia, 1961;

Ed.D, 1966 Donald E. Hutchings (also Pediatrics). Ph.D., Columbia, 1965 Maureen Kanzler. B.A., Hunter, 1938; M.A., New York University, 1940; M.S., Hunter,

1959; Ph.D., Fordham, 1967 Stephen E. Karpiak. Ph.D., Fordham, 1972 Dennis D. Kelly. Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

110 PSYCHIATRY

Dolores Kreisman. B.A., Barnard, 1953; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969 Cornelis Stokman. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Social Work

Janet B. Waiiams. B.S., Tufts, 1969; M.S., Southeastern Massachusetts, 1972; M.S.W., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Social Sciences

Alexander Askenazy. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Muriel Hammer. Ph.D., Columbia, 1961

Carol C. Schwartz. B.S, Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., Yale, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Nettie Terestman. M.S. W., Columbia, 1940; D.S. W., 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

Syed Abdullah. M.A., Calcutta, 1961; M.B., 1962

Morton J. Aronson. B.A., Temple, 1944; M.D., 1947

John A. Atchley. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Athanasia Balkoura. M.D., Athens, 1960

Amiram Barkai. M.Sc, Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1963; Ph.D., 1970

Lecih Beck. M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1943

Christian C. Beels. B.A., Rochester, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1963

Robinette Bell. B.A., Smith College, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Stephen L. Bennett. B.S., Queens (New York), 1949, M.D., Cornell, 1953

Anne E. Bernstein. B.A., Barnard, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Stanley Bone. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1974

Paul F. Califano. B.A., Adelphi, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1954 Robert J. Campbell. M.D., Columbia, 1948

Ian Alberto Canino. B.S., Georgetown, 1966; M.D., Puerto Rico, 1970 William J. Chambers. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Tufts, 1972 Harvey R. Chertoff. B.A., Columbia, 1962; M.D., Einstein, 1966 Stanley J. Coen. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., 1962 Frances Cohen. B.A., Harvard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975 Max P. Cohen. M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Louise Coleman. M.D., Southern California, 1948

Francine Coumos. B.S., City College (New York), 1967; M.D., New York University, 1971 DeWitt L. Crandell. M.D., Arkansas, 1955 Barbara H. De Betz. M.D., Miami, 1970 Zira De Fries. M.D., New York Medical College, 1942 Leonard Diamond. B.A., Tulane, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1953 Richard A. Dickes. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967 Robert M. Elvolve. B.A., Michigan, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966 Charies F. Entelis. M.D., Virginia, 1974 James W. Flax. B.A., Antioch, 1971; M.D., Minnesota, 1974 Gerald I. Fogel. M.D., Michigan, 1962

Bruce Forester. B.A., Dartmouth, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965 Eugene A. Friedberg. M.D., Buffalo, 1958

Bimalendu Ganguly. M.B., B.S., Calcutta Medical College (India), 1964 Lee R. Gardner. B.A., Barnard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

PSYCHIATRY 111

Myron R. Gershberg. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.A., 1956; M.D., Buffalo, 1960

lona Ginsburg. B.A., Vassar, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957

Richard J. Glavin. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Rochester, 1955

Ana B. Glick. B.A., Bennington, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1963

Robert Glick. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Edwin Goldstein (in Pediatrics). B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958

Charles Goodstein. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1962

Harvey M. Hammer. B.A., Cornell, 1956; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960

Gary J. Grad. B.A., Illinois, 1965; M.D., 1969

Rose Hartmann. B.A., New York University, 1937; M.D., Woman's Medical, 1945

Myra S. Hatterer. B.A., New York University, 1955; M.D., New York Medical College,

1959 Gregory Heimark. B.A., St. Olaf (Minnesota), 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Michelle L. Hirsch. B.S., City College, 1968; M.D., State University of New York (Syracuse),

1973 Joel S. Hoffman. B.A., Harvard 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Steven E. Hyler. B.A., New York University, 1971; M.D., New York Medical College,

1975 David Iverson. B.A., Rochester, 1963; M.D., Boston, 1968 Roberta Jaeger. B.A., Barnard, 1963; M.D., Columbia, 1966 David Jaffe. M.D., Jefferson, 1950 Frank S. Jewett. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Lila J. Kalinich. B.A., Northwestern, 1966; M.D., 1969 Neil B. Kavey. B.A., Princeton, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Thomas Kranjac. B.A., New York University, 1970; M.D., New York Medical College,

1975 Peter Laderman. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1947 Frederick Lane. B.A., Cornell, 1949; M.D., Yale, 1953 Norman D. Lazar. M.D., Louisville, 1948

Milton Lee. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York Medical College, 1956 Leon Lefer. B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., Lausanne, 1952 Burton Lerner. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957 Steven J. Levitan. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., Buffalo, 1965 Henry L. McCurtis. B.S., Texas Southern, 1968; M.D., Stanford, 1974 William McFarlane. B.A., Earlham (Indiana), 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Eric R. Marcus (also Social Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969 Susan Matorin. B.A., Vassar, 1964; M.S. W., Columbia, 1966 Frederick Mendelsohn. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Stanford, 1958 Michael Milano. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964 Bobba Jean Moody. B.A., Hunter, 1964; M.S. W., Fordham, 1968 Robert S. Mumford. M.D., McGill, 1943

Philip R. Muskin. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., New York Medical College, 1974 Joseph C. Napoli. B.S., State University of New York (Stony Brook), 1977; D.D.S.,

Columbia, 1981 Jaime Nos. M.D., Valencia (Spain), 1967; M.P.H., Columbia, 1975 Patricia O'Connor. B.A., St. Mary's (Indiana), 1964; M.A., New York University, 1976;

Ph.D., 1978 David Douglas Olds. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1981 Louis Padovano. B.S., Georgetown, 1952; M.D., 1956 Robert P. Parkin. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1950 David Peretz. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D.,

New York University, 1959 Kathryn F. Prescott. M.D., New York University, 1950 Lyle E. Rosnick. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Arnold Rothstein. B.A., Brown, 1958; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1962

112 PSYCHIATRY

Boris Rubinstein. B.A., Colegio Israelite (Mexico City), 1961; M.D., NacionaJ (Mexico), 1970; M.P.H., Harvard, 1974

M. Bruce Sarlin. B.A., M.D., Tulane, 1957

Irene B. Seeland. M.D., Heidelberg, 1965

Lawrence Shaderowfsky. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York Medical School, 1960

Edward M. Shelley. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1964

Charles Siegal. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1958

Eric H. Singer. Ph.D., New York University, 1975

Frieda H. Spady. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

Jerome Steiner. B.A., Chicago, 1949; M.A., 1951; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1962

Jonathan W. Stewart. B.A., Swarthmore, 1967; M.D., Yale, 1971

Diane L. Stone. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1939; M.D., George Washington, 1943

Kenneth G. Terkelsen. B.A., Georgetown, 1965; M.D., Jefferson, 1969

Ann R. Turkel. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D., Albany, 1952

Gloria M. Warner. M.D., New York, 1959

Gail A. Wasserman. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1967; M.A., Illinois, 1970; Ph.D., City University of New York, 1977

Martin Weiler. B.A., Syracuse, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1954

Richard M. Weiss. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1960

Josef H. Weissberg. M.S., Albany Medical College, 1952

George H. Wilkie. M.D., Harvard, 1957

Donald A. Winn. M.D., Oklahoma, 1957

Beth K. Yudofsky. B.A., Smith, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976

Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatric Psychiatry

Jeanette J. Jansky. M.S., College of the City of New York, 1960; Ph.D, Columbia, 1970

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Public Health

Judith Rabkin. B.A., Wellesley, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1967; M.P.H, Colum- bia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Mark J. Blecher. M.S., Yale, 1975; Ph.D., 1977 Melinda Broman. B.A., Cornell, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1977 Irwin Mansdorf. M.A., Adelphi, 1973; Ph.D., 1976

Letty Munz. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., College of the City of New York, 1952; Ph.D., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatric Social Work

Susan Matorin. B.A. Vassar, 1964; M.S. W., Columbia, 1966

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES (continued) RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

PSYCHIATRY Virginia Lozzi, M.D. Samuel W. Anderson,

Burton August, M.D. George Luhrmann, M.D. Ph.D.

Alvin J. Glick, M.D. Ira L. Mintz, M.D. David P. Birkett, M.D.,

Ivan Goldberg, M.D. Hannah Shields, M.A. B.Ch.

Gurston Goldin, M.D. Cerda Striker, M.D. Richard L. Blumenthal,

Naomi Leiter, M.D. p|^ D

PSYCHIATRY 113

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES {Continued)

Barbara Ann Cornblatt,

Ph.D. Richard S. Feldman, M.D. Anita K. Fischer, Ph.D. Mitchell L. Kietzman,

M.D. Morton Levitt, Ph.D. John A. Logan, M.D. Yvonne Marcuse, Ph.D. John Nee, M.P.H. Arthur S. Perumey, Ph.D. Stephanie Portnoy, Ph.D. Kurt Salzinger, Ph.D. Suzanne Salzinger, M.D. David Wilder, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES IN BIOCHEMISTRY Sahebarao P. Mahadik,

Ph.D. A.S. Perumal, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PSYCHIATRY

Geary E. Ahern, M.D.

Satwani Ahluwalia,

M.B.B.S. Peter Aldin, M.D. Paul J. Ambrosini, M.D. Houshang Aminia, M.D. llena L. Appleby, Ph.D. Stan S. Arkow, M.D. John J. Barsa, M.D. Anne Bartlett, M.D. Raymond Bernick, M.D. Bruce Y. Bleecker, M.S.W.

Edward N. Brenna, M.D.

Abraham A. Bridger, M.D.

Sydney C. Bush, M.D.

Leon Chattah, M.D.

Daniel Elliott Cohen, M.D.

Charles Andrew Dackis, M.D.

Susan M. Deakins, M.D.

Dominick De Fabio, M.D.

Grace De Vierno, M.Ed.

Jennifer i. Downey, M.D.

Katherine Falk, M.D.

Sylvia M. Furstenberg, M.D.

Jack Matthew Gorman, M.D.

Rosalie Greenberg, M.D.

Wilma Marsha Harrison, M.D.

Stanley M. Hertz, M.D.

Martin J. Hoffman, M.S.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Arthur R. Jacobs, M.D. Stanislaw P. Jonas, M.D. Sherry Katz-Bearnot, M.D. Bonnie Kaufman, M.D. Richard A. Kresch, M.D. David Barry Leibow, M.D. David Y. Levine, M.D. Craig M. Morris, M.D. Joseph H. Owens, M.D. Patricio R. Paez, M.D. Jeffrey M. Pines, M.D. Leslie Lynne Powers,

M.D. Phyllis B. Robbins, M.D. Rogelio Roncal, M.D. Robert SantuUi, M.D.

David P. Schiebel, M.D.

Maria 1. Schneider, M.D.

Karl John Schroeder, M.D.

Jonathan R. Schwartz, M.D.

Beth June Seelig, M.D.

Samuel Simmens, M.A.

Linda J. Skinner, M.D.

Elizabeth C. Smith, M.D.

Marjorie Jane Smith, M.D.

Gloria Jean Stern, M.D.

Fay Stetner, M.S.

Paul Douglas Troutman

Alan J. Tuckman, M.D.

Thomas J. Yager, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY Rhianon Allen, Ph.D. Susan Cohen, Ph.D. Richard P. Cressen, Ph.D. Judith F. Feldman, Ph.D. Richard W. Gaines, B.A. Michael Seth Quittman, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL

WORK

Eleanor F. Smyth, M.S.W.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK Susan Braiman, M.S.W. Carla Daichman, M.S.W. Patricia Fink, M.S.W. Miriam Gibson, M.S.W. Elizabeth Golden, M.S.W. Kathleen C. Lopez, M.S. Sally Lord, M.S.W. Anna G. Welton

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Rhea Fox, M.S.

Ellen P. Lukens, M.S.W.

James W. Montgomery,

M.S. Doris M. Mortenson, M.D. Reed C.W. Moskowitz, M.D. Barbara C. Sacco, R.N. Reggie Swenson, M.S.W.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Selda Diatlo, M.S. Karen Goldberg, M.S.W.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Laura Lee Dean, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Joan Layton, M.A. Mary W. Masland, M.S. Gregory Schimoler Margaret Shannon, M.S.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Viola W. Bernard, M.D. John A. Cook, M.D. Katrina De Hirsch, B.A. Marjorie H. Frank Olga Frankel, M.D. George Goldman, M.D. Soil Goodman, M.D. George A. Jervis, M.D. Henriette R. Klein, M.D. Lawrence C. Kolb, M.D. Bernard Pacella, M.D. Helen Schucman, M.D. Herbert Spiegel, M.D. Leo Srole, Ph.D. Alberta Szalita, M.D. Joseph Zubin, M.D.

LECTURERS

Kenneth Z. Altshuler,

M.D. Jacob A. Arlow, M.D. Stuart S. Asch, M.D. Bruce Ballard, M.D. Beatrice Beebe, Ph.D. Milton M. Berger, M.D. Hector Bird, M.D. Marion S. Blank, Ph.D. Henry Brill, M.D. Gerard E. Bruder, Ph.D. Arnold M. Cooper, M.D. Paul William DeBell, M.D. Lawrence Deutsch, M.D. Samuel L. Feder, M.D.

114 PSYCHIATRY

LECTURERS {continued) Allen Frances, M.D. Sheldon Gaylin, M.D. Barbara Gillam-

Lawargren, Ph.D. Eugene L. Goldberg, M.D. David S. Goldman, M.D. Gary Grad, M.D. William I. Grossman,

Ph.D. Ernest M. Gruenberg,

M.D. Gad Hakerma, Ph.D. Howard P. Hunt, Ph.D.

LECTURERS {continued) Jerome Jaffe, M.D. Steven E. Katz, M.D. Otto F. Kernberg, M.D. Paulina Kernberg, M.D. Erica Loutsch, M.D. Abbas Nahas, M.D. John M. Oldham, M.D. Samuel W. Perry, M.D. Robert W. Rieber, Ph.D. Bennett L. Rcsner, M.D. Franklin D. Russek, M.D. Harold Sackeim, Ph.D.

LECTURERS {continued) Michael Sacks, M.P.H. Richard S. Sauber, Ph.D. Roy Schafer, Ph.D. Jonah W. Schein, M.D. Jesse Schomer, M.D. Gerri Ellen Schwartz,

Ph.D. Bonnie Jean Spring, Ph.D. Leo Stone, M.D. Milton Viederman, M.D. Martin S. Willick, M.D. Sheldon Zimberg, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Harvey Gurian. M.D., Toronto, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Larry Kenneth Brown. B.S., Maryland, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976 John E. Denny. Ph.D., Massachusetts, 1971 Charles J. Hudson. B.A., Princeton, 1959; M.D., McGiU, 1963 Charles W. Lamb. Ph.D., Ohio State, 1966

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Virginia N. Wilking. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Associate Clinical Professors

Gladys Egri. M.D., Madrid, 1955; M.S., Columbia, 1965

William A. Ellis, Jr. B.S., Howard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Margaret M. Lawrence. B.A., Cornell, 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1940

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Seymour Gers. B.S., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D, State University of New York (Downstate),

1956 Emery S. Hetrick. B.A., Ohio State, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1957 Austin Moore. B.S., Queens (New York), 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959 Peter H. Schween. M.D., Hamburg, 1955

Assistant Clinical Professors

Sumanasirir Alahendra. M.B.B.S., Ceylon (Sri Lanka)

Irwin J. Averbach. B.S., Michigan, 1949; M.D., Buffalo, 1954

PSYCHIATRY 115

Shale Brownstein. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1955; M.D., 1959

Jeffrey Hammer. B.A., Adelphi, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1967

Carol Leal. B.S., Louisiana State, 1963; M.D., Howard, 1967

J. Trevor Undo. B.A., New York University, 1946; M.D., Lausanne, 1957

Sidney M. Lytton. B.A., Maryland, 1949; M.D., 1955

Gideon Nachumi. B.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1958 Raymond W. Ransom. B.S., Howard, 1962; M.D., 1967 Raymond Raskin. B.A., New York University, 1942; M.D., 1946 Sady Sultan. M.D., Universidad Central de Venezuela Pauline E. Thompson. M.D., Howard, 1944 Anthony F. Villamena. B.A., New York University, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College,

1969 Robert L. Walton. M.B.B.S., Melbourne, 1966

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Joseph C. Napoli, M.D. M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Ellis B. Charles, M.D. Frederick H. Kahn, M.D. Canilo R. Marques, M.D. Frank F. Thompson, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Carol Garmiza, Ph.D.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lloyd A. Hamilton, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Harvard, 1954

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

James Wickstrom, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Albert M. Bromberg. B.S., College of William and Mary, 1953; M.D:, Duke, 1957 Linus Root. B.S., Georgetown, 1953; M.D., 1957

Ronald Sorvina. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1954; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1958

LECTURER

Morton Friedman, M.D.

116 PSYCHIATRY

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professors

Clarice Kestenbaum. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1950; M.D., 1960 Harley C. Shands. B.S., Tulane, 1936; M.D., 1939

Associate Clinical Professors

Gary Lee Lefer. B.S., Stanford, 1962; M.D., Georgetown, 1966 Adam Munz. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Shepard J. Kantor. B.A., Colby, 1965; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology

Harry Kissileff. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1962; Ph.D., 1966

Assistant Clinical Professors

Gail B. Allen. B.A., Wellesley, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961

Frederic A. Ailing. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Alex Caemmerer, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947

Irene Chiarandini. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1963

Ralph Colp, Jr. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1948

Kathleen Deagen. B.A., St. Joseph's, 1967; M.D. Bologna, 1972

Paul Dince. M.D., New York University, 1948

Nathaniel Donson. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., New York University, 1962

John A. Fogelman. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1964 Leo Kron. M.D., British Columbia, 1971 David M. McDonald. B.S., Oregon, 1945; M.D., Tufts, 1949 Eugene Mahon. M.D., National (Ireland), 1964 John A. Milici. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D, Geneva (Switzerland), 1957 Howard Millman. B.A., Cornell, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1969 Paul William Nassar. B.A., New York University, 1963; M.D., Rome, 1968 Kenneth Porter. B.A., Harvard, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1969 Harry R. Potter. B.S., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Stephen P. Reibel. B.A., Harvard, 1957; M.D., 1961 John W. Rosenberger. B.A., Dartmouth, 1956; M.D.C.M., McGill, 1960 Sirgay Sanger. B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D, 1960

George Satran. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Robert D. Scharf . B.S., Union, 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1970 Eleanor Schuker. B.A., Swarthmore, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965 Ira B. Silverstein. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1964 Howard K. Welsh. B.S., City College (New York), 1966; M.D, Albert Einstein, 1971 Harvey L. White. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., New York Medical College, 1964 C. Philip Wilson. B.A., Yale, 1942; M.D, Columbia, 1945

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

James D. Meltzer. B.A., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., New York University, 1973 Arthur Weider. Ph.D., New York University, 1946

PSYCHIATRY PUBLIC HEALTH 117

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

William H. Brownlee,

M.D. Lucy E. Collins, M.D. Blanche Glass, Ph.D. Justin L. Greene, M.D. Sonia W. Hyman, M.D. Arthur M. Perlman, M.D. Barbara R. Rosenfeld,

M.D. Mitchell S. RosenthcJ,

M.D. William M. Tucker, M.D. William D. Wheat, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Alma Levinson, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Savador Eduoardo Algaze,

M.D. Cyrus Aroomloui, M.D. Michael E. Barberie, M.D. Charles Lee Bell, M.D. Kenneth M. Berc, M.D. Arlene C. Caldwell, M.D. Robert Allen Cutick, Ph.D. Victor D'Arc, M.D. Paolo Decina, M.D. Leonard Deutsch, M.D. Andrew B. Druck, Ph.D. Laura Duval, M.D. Osvaldo J. Evangelista,

M.D. Bruce W. Fader, M.D. Harold H. Fogelman, M.D. Joanne Leslie Foster,

M.D. Stephen C. Glassberg,

M.D. Maurice R. Green, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Maurice Haberman, M.D. Charles L. Ihlenfeld, M.D. Charles G. Jackson, Jr.,

M.D. David K. Jordan, M.D. Kenneth R. Junblut Willard S. Kahn, M.D. Jerome Edward Kaufman,

M.D. Robert J. Kent, M.D. liana Kochen, M.D. Rhoda N. Krawitz Marvin Roy Kremberg, M.D. Woon Soon Lee, M.D. Ernesto Lozano, M.D. James M. McGowan Enrique Madrigal-Segura,

M.D. Henry Clay Mallard, M.D. Donald Mayerson, M.D. Ruth Wallach Mollod, Ph.D. Jeffry R. Nurenberg, M.D. Antonio Parras Henry A. Paul, M.D. Michael A. Pawel, M.D. Antonio G. Pena, M.D. Michael Piercy, M.D. Arthur S. Piatt, D.O. Ellen M. Piatt, M.D. Corey Nyles Rigberg,

M.D. Mary Rodriguez-Boulan Jonathan E. Rosenfeld, M.D. George Edward Rowan Jeffrey H. Sacks, M.D. Ranja Katerina Schilot,

M.D. Mona Schneider Susan Butler See Christina M. Sekaer, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Roy Shapiro Jane Simon Michael Stern Melvin L. Thrash, M.D. Joel Tricarico, M.D. Martha C. Troutman,

M.D. Maria L.C. Velez, M.D. Alexander V.

Voitashevsky, M.D. Joel Wallack, M.D. David S. Weinberger,

M.D. Olin West, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Robert A. Cutick, Ph.D. Andrew B. Druch, Ph.D. Joan Schaeffer, Ph.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Hanne E. Favelukes, M.D. Shirin Ghaemma-Ghami Edward E. Gilmour, M.D. Joel Gonchar, M.D. Alan Kouzmanoff, M.D. Keith Sedlacek, M.D. Victor Syrmis, M.D. Nestor J. Totero Charles F. Yackulic, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS John Cotton, M.D. Lilli C. Shalsa, M.D.

LECTURERS Terry J. Golash Wayne A. Myers

Public Health

Delamar Professor, Dean, and Chairman

Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine) (also Psychiatry). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

118 PUBLIC HEALTH

Biostatistics

Professors

Joseph L. Fleiss. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.S., 1961; Ph.D., 1967

John Van Ryzin. B.S., Marquette, 1957; M.S., 1959; Ph.D., Michigan State, 1964

Adjunct Professor

Carl H. Erhardt. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1941; M.P.A., New York University, 1957; M.S, Harvard, 1958; D.Sc., 1962

Associate Professor

Agnes P. Berger. Ph.D., Budapest, 1939; M.A., Columbia, 1944

Senior Research Associates

Neal W. Chilton. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; D.D.S., New York University,

1943; M.P.H., Columbia, 1946 Allen S. Ginsberg (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.M.E., Cornell, 1958;

M.I.E., 1959; Ph.D., Stanford, 1970

Assistant Professors

Robert R. Golden. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1960; M.S., Oregon State, 1963;

Ph.D., Minnesota, 1976 Bruce Levin (Mathematical Statistics). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.A., Harvard, 1972; Ph.D.,

1974 Patrick E. Shrout (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., St. Louis, 1972; Ph.D., Chicago, 1976 Sylvan Wallenstein. B.S., City College, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Sol Blumenthal. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.B.A., New York University,

1958; Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1969 Joseph Breuer. M.D., Vienna, 1937; M.P.H, Columbia, 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D., 1969 Turkan K. Gardenier. B.A., Vassar, 1961; M.A., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., 1966 Neil Jay Risch. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1972; M.S., Illinois, 1947; Ph.D.,

California, 1979 Donald C. Ross. B.A., Rochester, 1955; M.A., North Carolina, 1957; Ph.D., 1960

INSTRUCTORS RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Carol A. Bodian, M.S. Jennie K. Kline, Ph.D. (in the

Frieda Nelson, B.A. Sergievsky Center)

Alex Tytun, M.S. Molly Park, M.A.

Robert A. Strauss, M.D.

Livia R. Turgeon, M.S.

Environmental Health Sciences

Professor

I. Bernard Weinstein (also Medicine) (in the Cancer Center). B.S., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., 1955

PUBLIC HEALTH 119

Associate Professors

Dezider Grunberger (also Biochemistry) (in the Institute of Cancer Research). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; ScD., 1968

Jeanne M. Stellman. B.S., City College, 1968; Ph.D., 1972

Senior Research Associate

Granville H. Sewell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; Ph.D., 1966

Assistant Professor

Alan M. Jeffrey. B.S., Hull (UK), 1966; Ph.D., University College of North Wales (UK), 1970

ASSOCIATE RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Michael Gochfeld, M.D. Leslie R. Andrews, M.A.

Gloria C. Gordon, Ph.D.

Epidemiology

Professors

Bruce P. Dohrenwend (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.A., 1951; Ph.D., Cornell,

1955 Zena A. Stein (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Cape Town, 1941; M.A., 1942; M.B., B.Ch.,

Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950 Mervyn W. Susser (Gertrude H. Sergievsky Professor and Director, Sergievsky Center). M.B.,B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner. B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Adjunct Professors

Peter Greenwald. B.A., Colgate, 1957; M.D., State University of New York, 1961; M.P.H.,

Harvard, 1967; Dr.P.H., 1974 Wolf Szmuness. M.D., Kharkov Medical Institute (USSR), 1955; D.Med.Sc, Academy of

Medicine (Lublin, Poland), 1964

Associate Professors

Mary G. Curnen. M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1948; D.T.M., Antwerp (Belgium), 1949; Dr.

PH., Columbia, 1972 David Rush (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Elmer F. Struening. B.S., Hastings, 1949; M.S., Purdue, 1951; Ph.D., 1957

Adjunct Associate Professors

Patricia Cohen. B.A., Hamline, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1968 Holger H. Hansen (in the Sergievsky Center). M.D., Freie Universitat (German Federal Republic), 1961; M.P.H, Columbia, 1967; Dr.P.H, 1973

120 PUBLIC HEALTH

Senior Research Associates

Lillian M. Belmont. B.A., Brooklyn, 1947; M.A., College of the City of New York, 1949;

Ph.D., New York University, 1957; M.S., Columbia, 1970 Inge F. Goldstein. B.A., Wellesley, 1951; M.S., Pittsburgh, 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1968

Assistant Professors

Ora S. Fagan. B.A., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1961; M.S.W., California (Berkeley), 1965;

D.S.W., 1973 Bruce G. Link. B.A., Earlham, 1971; Ph.D., Columbia, 1980 Nigel S. Paneth (also Pediatrics) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D.,

Harvard, 1972; M.P.H., Columbia, 1978 Stephen Shafer (also Neurology) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D.,

Columbia, 1970; M.P.H., 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Ann B. Goodman. B.A., Radcliffe, 1953; M.A., George Washington, 1963; M.S., Columbia,

1972 Paul S. May. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1951; M.S., Syracuse, 1952; D.Sc,

Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1955; M.P.H, Columbia, 1970

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Robert Lubin, M.P.H., Ph.D.

Health Administration

Professors

Lowell E. Bellin. B.S., Yale, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1951;

M.P.H, Harvard, 1964 Lucie S. Kelly (also Nursing). B.S.N, Pittsburgh, 1947; M.Litt., 1957; Ph.D., 1965 Frank W. van Dyke (Administrative Medicine). B.A., Union (Schenectady), 1939; M.S.,

Columbia, 1954 Samuel Wolfe. M.D., Toronto, 1950; M.P.H, Columbia, 1960; Dr.P.H, 1961

Adjunct Professors

Arne C. V. Barkhuus (Public Health Practice). B.A., Copenhagen, 1926; M.D., 1933;

D.P.H, Johns Hopkins, 1938 Joseph V. Terenzio. B.A., Yale, 1939; J.D., Fordham, 1947; M.S., Columbia, 1954

Clinical Professor

Arthur Manoharan (at Harlem Hospital). M.B.B.S., Madras, 1951; Dr.P.H, Columbia, 1960

Associate Professors

Bernard Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1961; M.P.H, Harvard, 1963 Bruce Vladeck (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.A.,

Michigan, 1972; Ph.D., 1973

PUBLIC HEALTH 121

Adjunct Associate Professors

Noreen M. Clark. B.S., Utah, 1965; M.A., Columbia, 1972; Ph.D., 1976

Harold Fruchtbaum (History and Philosophy of Public Health). B.C.E., New York University,

1955; M.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1956; Ph.D., Harvard, 1964; M.A.,

Cambridge, 1968 Lloyd F. Novick. B.A., Colgate, 1961; M.D., New York University, 1965; M.P.H., Yale,

1971 Irving S. Shapiro (Public Health Education). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1938;

M.S., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1954

Senior Research Associate

Regina Loewensteia (in the Center for Community Health Systems). B.A., Barnard, 1936; M.A., Columbia, 1937

Assistant Professors

Fred Goldman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1967; M.A., Brown, 1970; Ph.D., City College,

1975 Harriet S. Goldman (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., New York University, 1962;

D.D.S., 1965;M.P.H., Columbia, 1966 Sheila A. Gorman. B.S., R.N., Niagara, 1959; M.P.H., Columbia, 1972 Marcia L. Pinkett-Heller. B.A., Howard, 1963; M.P.H., Michigan, 1970 Ralph Joseph UUman. B.A., Cornell, 1970; M.B.A., Rochester, 1972; M.S., 1979

Assistant Professor of Clinical Public Health

Stephen N. Rosenberg. B.A., Cornell, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967; M.P.H., Harvard, 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Raymond S. Alexander. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.B.A., 1954; M.S., Columbia, 1956 John Baer. B.A., Oberlin, 1959; M.S., Columbia, 1961; D.P.A., New York University,

1967 Arlene Bregman. B.A., State University of New York (Albany), 1971; M.P.H., Columbia,

1975 Annette Choolfaian. B.S. Bridgeport, 1964; M.P.A., New York University, 1972 Anita Stiles Curran. B.A., Connecticut, 1951; M.D., New York Medical College, 1955;

M.P.H., Columbia, 1974 William H. Hermann. B.S, Missouri, 1951; M.S., Yale, 1953 Nicholas Herskovits. B.B.A., Bernard Baruch School of Business and Public Administration,

1963 Henry R. Karpe. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.S., Wisconsin, 1972 Nicetas H. Kuo (Public Health Practice). M.D., Philippines, 1941; M.P.H., Columbia, 1953 W. David Latham. B.S., Stanford, 1966; M.B.A., 1968 Francis C. Lindaman. B.A., Gettysburg, 1935; M.A., 1936 William L. Nute, Jr. B.A., Swarthmore, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943 Percival B. Phillips (Public Health Practice). B.A., San Francisco State, 1954; M.A., 1956;

Ed.D, Columbia, 1965 Eleanore Rothenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; M.P.A., New York University, 1969; Ph.D.,

1975 Esther A. Schisa (Public Health Practice). B.S, Syracuse, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1955

122 PUBLIC HEALTH

Martin Schnall. B.A., Yesbiva, 1955; M.S., Columbia, 1957; M.B.A., New York University,

1974 Sheila M. Smythe. B.S., Creighton, 1952; M.S., Columbia, 1956 Boris A. Vanadzin. M.D., Munich, 1955; M.P.H., California (Berkeley), 1959

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Ward S. Condelli, Ph.D. Everett D. Hines, M.S. Lawrence Krasnoff, Ph.D. Kathleen L. MUler, Ph.D. Carol S. Vance, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS Stephen Banks, M.A. Peter D. Bardax, J.D. Barbara S. Cooper, M.D. Catherine D. Crone, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Michael Goldfarb, M.S. Ruth Haase, M.A. Margaret L. Haynes,

M.P.H. Steven Karten, M.B.A. Dulcy B. Miller, M.S. Thomas A. Sherwood,

M.P.H. Virginia K. Stowe, M.S.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Vicki Ashton, M.S.W.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Stephanie M. Duberman,

M.D. Monica Gail Reiss, M.P.H. Arthur G. Schatzkin, M.D. Barry Snow, B.A.

Population and Family Health

Professor

Allan G. Rosenfield (also Obstetrics and Gynecology) (Director, Center for Population and

Family Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959 John A. Ross (in HSHR). B.A. Ottawa, 1956; M.A., Yale, 1957; Ph.D., 1961

Professor of Clinical Public Health

Joe D. Wray. B.A., Stanford, 1947; M.D., 1952; M.P.H., North Carolina, 1967

Associate Professors

Giorgio R. Solimano (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D., Chile, 1960

Nicholas Cunningham (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1955;

Dr. PH., 1976 Susan G. Philliber. B.A., Florida State, 1965; M.S., 1966; Ph.D., 1968

Adjunct Associate Professors

Susann Bennett-Clark (at St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center). Ph.D., Western Australia,

1963 John Bongaarts. M.S., Eindhoven Institute of Technology, 1968; Ph.D., Illinois, 1972 Thomas Frejka. Engineer, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1966

Associate Professor of Clinical Public Health

Martin E. Gorosh. B.A., Brooklyn, 1959; M.P.H, Johns Hopkins, 1969; Dr. PH., 1973

Senior Research Associate

Walter B. Watson. B.A., Southern Methodist, 1953; M.S., Wisconsin, 1954; Ph.D., 1959

PUBLIC HEALTH 123

Assistant Professors

Katherine F. Darabi. B.A., Syracuse, 1969; M.F., Columbia, 1975: M.Phil.. 1977; Ph.D..

1980 Stephen L. Isaacs. B.A., Brown, 1961; J.D., Columbia. 1965 Judith E. Jones. B.A., Hunter, 1956 Joanne E. Revson. B.A., Clark, 1969; M.P.H.. California (Berkeley). 1972; Dr. P.M..

Columbia, 1980 Pearilla Rothenberg. B.A., Pennsylvania. 1970; M.Phil., Columbia. 1974; Ph.D., 1976 William A. Van Wie. B.A., College of Wooster, 1961; B.D., Pittsburgh Seminary 1964;

M.P.H., North Carolina, 1968; Dr. P.H., 1974

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Joy G. Dryfoos. B.A.. Antioch. 1951; M.A.. Sarah Lawrence. 1966

Assistant Clinical Professor

Rosemary Barber-Madden. B.A., Jersey City State College, 1968; M.S., Hunter, 1977; Ed.D., Temple, 1980

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE INSTRUCTOR STAFF ASSOCIATE

Henry G. Elkins, Jr., Ph.D. Marjorie A. Costa, M.P.H. Mohammed Matthews, M.S.

Sociomedical Sciences

Professors

Barbara Dohrenwend. B.A., Wellesley, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1948; Ph.D., 1954 Jack Elinson. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., George Washington, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

Associate Professors

John L. Colombotos. B.A., Columbia. 1949; M.A., 1952; Ph.D.. Michigan, 1961 Denise B. Kandel (in Psychiatry). B.A., Bryn Mawr. 1952; M.A.. Columbia. 1953; Ph.D.. 1960

Senior Research Associates

Ann F. Brunswick. B.A, Hunter, 1946; M.A., Clark, 1947

Paul W. Haberman. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1948; M.B.A.. New York University. 1961 Eric Josephson. B.A., New York University, 1947; M.A., Columbia. 1949; Ph.D., 1959 Mata K. Nikias. D.D.S., Athens (Greece), 1953; M.P.H. Columbia. 1960; Ph.D., 1967

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Sciences

Carol C. Schwartz. B.S., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., Yale, 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Margery M. Braren. B.A., Barnard, 1961; M.A.. Columbia. 1963; Ph.D.. 1971

Scilly Guttmacher. B.S., Wisconsin, 1963

Matthew A. Rosen. B.A., Columbia. 1967; M.A.. 1969; M.Phil.. 1975; Ph.D.. 1979

124 PUBLIC HEALTH

Mitchell Schorow (Medical Education). B.A., Roosevelt, 1950; MA., Northwestern, 1961; Ph.D., Utah, 1971

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE

Israel Adler, Ph.D. Lambros Comitas, Ph.D. Stanley Fisher, M.S.

Corinne Kirchner, M.Phil. f,"^^ ASSOCIATE

Athilia E. Siegmann, M.S. ^'^^o"^ R^^^^s- ^P"- Morton Siege! (at Harlem Hospital), M.A.

Tropical Medicine

Professors

Michael Katz (also Pediatrics). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963 Roger W. Williams (Medical Entomology). B.S., Illinois, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., Columbia,

1947

Associate Professors

Philip A. D'Alesandro (Parasitology). B.S., Rutgers, 1952; M.S., 1954; Ph.D., Chicago,

1958 Dickson D. Despommier (Parasitology). B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., Columbia,

1964; Ph.D., Notre Dame, 1967

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ashton C. Cuckler (Parasitology). B.A., Nebraska, 1935; M.A., 1936; Ph.D., Minnesota,

1941 John D. Frame. B.A, Wheaton, 1938; M.D., Northwestern, 1943

Assistant Professor

Suzanne Holmes (Parasitology). B.A., New York University, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974

INSTRUCTORS

Martin G. Blechman, M.D.

Chung C. Wang, M.D.

Faculty Members Not Affiliated with Specific Divisions

Professor

Sami A. Hashim (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Beirut, 1950; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Adjunct Professor

Myron Brin (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Cornell, 1947; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1951

PUBLIC HEALTH 125

Assistant Professors of Anthropology

Leith P. Mullings. B.S., Cornell, 1966; M.A., Chicago, 1970; Ph.D., 1975 Robert J. Wasserstrom. B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.A., 1973; Ph.D., 1977

Assistant Professor of Nursing

Lois Arlene Grau. B.S.N., Marquette, 1968; M.S., Wisconsin, 1976; Ph.D., 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Paul N. Borsky. B.A., Brooklyn, 1942

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Nursing

Nancy Graham. B.S., Columbia, 1956; M.A., New York University, 1960; M.P.H., Colum- bia, 1972; Dr.P.K, 1976

Lecturers in All Divisions

Kenneth F. Adamec, M.S. George H. Adams, M.S. Frederick D. Alley, M.D. Allan C. Anderson, M.H.A. Lenore M. Appenzcller Peter Baglio, Sc.M. Richard A. Berman,

M.B.A., M.H.A. Robert Boyar Roy Brown, M.A. Carlos Caguiate, M.P.H. Martin Cherkasky, M.D. Irene J. Clark, M.P.H. Allan Conney, Ph.D. Alvin J. Conway, M.S. Jean B. Cropper, M.P.H. Daniel L. Drosness,

M.P.H. Gary M. Eidsvold, M.D. Rinaldo A. Ferrer, M.D. Andrew C. Fleck, M.D. Thomas J. Foley, M.S. Stephen L. Forstenser,

M.S. Herbert Friedman, M.B.A. Richard C. Friedman, M.D. Steven Friedman, M.D. Nicholas Frudenberg Bernard Fuss, M.S.

Robert Galton, Ph.D. Gary Gambuti, M.P.A. George Goldberg, M.B.A. Judith D. Goldberg, Sc.D. Edward V. Grant Margaret Griesmer, B.S. Margaret T. Grossi, M.D. David Harris, M.D. Frank W. Hays, M.B.A. Robert E. Heinlein, M.S. Donald W. Helbig, M.D. E. Geoffrey High, M.S. Florence Kavaler, M.D. Howard R. Kelman, Ph.D. John T. Kolody, M.S. Elaine Lugovoy, M.A. Lawrence E. McDevitt,

B.A. Mary C. McLaughlin, M.D. Robert Markowitz, M.S. John S. Marr, M.P.H. Charles H. Meyer, M.S. Anthony C. Mustalish,

M.D. Janet Nakushian, M.A. Karl E. Nelson, M.S. Margaret J. O'Brien,

M.P.H.

Donna O'Hare, M.D. Jaime Olle, M.D. Jean Pakter, M.D. George W. Parsons, B.S. Dhun B. Patel, Ph.D. Clarence E. Pearson, M.S. Richard H. Perry, M.S. Olive E. Pitkin, M.D. Dorothy P. Rice, B.A. Peter Rogatz, M.D. Edward Rosasco, M.B.A. Alan H. Rosenblut, M.B.A. Hana Rostain, M.D. Rachel Rotkovitch, M.S. Harvey Schoenfeld, M.S. Joseph Sherber, M.S. Elliot J. Simon, M.S. Louis E. Stesin, Ph.D. Thomas J. G. Tighe, Jr.,

M.P.H. Andre A. O. Varma, M.D. Margaret Walsh, M.L.H. Jacqueline WarrRn, J.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Gloria Damann, M.P.H. Anna C. Gelman, C.P.H. Beatrice Mintz, M.D. Samuel M. Wishik, M.D.

126 RADIOLOGY

Radiology

Professor and Chairman

William B. Seaman. M.D., Harvard, 1941

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Philip O. Alderson. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1966; M.D., 1970

David H. Baker. M.D., Boston, 1951

Walter E. Berdon. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., 1955

Chu Huai Chang. M.D., St. John s (Shanghai), 1944

Zang-Hee Cho (Physics). B.S., Seoul National (Korea), 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D., Upsala,

1966 Kent Ellis. M.D., Yale, 1950

Eric J. Hall (Physics). D. Phil., Oxford, 1962; D. Sc, 1978 Sadek Hilal. M.D., Cairo, 1955 Harald H. Rossi (Physics). Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borek. B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weizman Institute (Israel), 1967

Professors of Clinical Radiology

Frieda Feldman. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., 1957 Donald L. King. B.A., Stanford, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Ralph Schlaeger. B.S., Wisconsin, 1942; M.D., 1945

Adjunct Professors

Victor P. Bond. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1943; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1945;

Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1952 ^ Simon Larach. Ph.D., Princeton, 1955

Associate Professors of Clinical Radiology

Thane Asch. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

John H. Austin. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Yale, 1965

Rashid Fawwaz. M.D., American (Beirut), 1960; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1968

Monique C. Katz. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963

Adjunct Associate Professor

Lawrence A. Shepp. B.S., Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, 1958; M.A., Princeton, 1960; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Sundara R. Ganti. M.B.B.S., Guntur Medical College (India), 1967; M.D., 1967 Kevin L. Macken. M.D., National (Ireland), 1947 Eric C. Martin. M.D., St. Thomas (London), 1967 Paul Sane. M.D., Bucharest, 1950

RADIOLOGY 127

Senior Research Associate

Charles R. Geard (Radiation Biophysics). B.A.S., Melbourne, 1960; M.Sc., Tasmania, 1969; Ph.D, Australian National, 1973

Assistant Professors

Andrew Arthur Maudsley. B.S.C., Nottingham, 1973; Ph.D., 1976 Richard C. Miller. B.A., Iowa, 1969; M.S., 1972; Ph.D., 1976

Steven P. Singer. B.S., City University oi New York, 1970; M.D., New York Medical College, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Benjamin Bashist. B.S., Brooklyn, 1972; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1975

Kaaren N. Bergquist. B.S., Wisconsin State, 1967; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1968

Nicholas M. Dzebolo. B.S., Union (Schnectady), 1969; M.D., Hahnemann, 1973

Peter D. Esser (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Brown, 1961; M.S., Adelphi, 1964; Ph.D.,

1971 Elliott Fanchuken. B.A., New York University, 1974; M.D., State University of New York

(Buffalo), 1975 Karen S. Fountain. B.A., Northern State College (South Dakota), 1968; M.D., Maryland,

1972 Sundara R. Ganti. M.B.B.S., Guntur Medical College (India), 1967; M.D., 1967 Richard P. Gold. B.A., Tufts, 1965; M.D., 1969 David V. Habif, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974 Edward L. Hcdlund. B.S., Iowa Wesleyan, 1969; M.D., Cornell, 1973 Nikitas D. Kessaris (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Emory, 1952; M.S., Harvard, 1953; Ph.D.,

1966 Arthur Liskow. B.S., Cincinnati, 1963; M.D., 1967 Michel E. Mawad. M.D., French University (Beirut), 1976 William H. Perman. M.S., Portland State, 1974; Ph.D, Wisconsin, 1980 Michael J. Schnur. B.A., New York University, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976 David W. Seldin. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968; M.S., Colorado, 1970;

M.D., New York University, 1975 Alan J. Silver. B.A., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Rochester, 1973 Fred C. Van Natta. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1964; M.D., 1968 Theodore Sheng-Tao Wang. Ph.D., Maryland, 1964

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S. Miami (Florida), 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Bruce J. Biavati (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.A., 1955; Ph.D., 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Harry Agress, Jr. B.A. Tufts, 1968; M.D. 1972 David A. FoUett. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1954 Shelby J. Galloway. B.A., Catawba College, 1961; M.D., Bowman-Gray, 1965 William M. Griffin. B.S., Notre Dame, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Up- state), 1962 Harvey L. Hecht. B.A., Amherst, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Steven D. Richman. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971 Robert Silbey. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

128 RADIOLOGY

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

Marion H. Biavati, Ph.D. RADIOLOGY RADIOLOGY {continued)

Richard P. Bird Ph.D. Barbara Binkert, M.D. Louis E. Rambler, M.D.

Daniel S. J. Choy, M.D. Leonard Bodner, M.D. Robert M. Turner, M.D.

Michael L. Freeman Ph.D. Judith A. Buckley, M.D. Stephen J. Vacirca, M.D.

Paul Furcinetti Ph.D. Gregory M. Carsen, M.D. Arthur S. Weisel, M.D.

Paul Goldhagen, Ph.D. Jeffrey Chalal, M.D. ^.^crv^.^rp

Paul J. Kliauga, Ph.D. Susan J. Frank, M.D. ?JT. f^^

Peter M.S. Wai, D.Engr.Sc. Richard A. Neff, M.D. Rudolph Gand Marco Zaider, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Harry Rodney Hartman. M.D., Yale, 1959

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Stephen W. Nagy. Ph.D., Connecticut, 1969

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY

Rajendrakumar Dalai, M.D. Robert D. Henretig, M.D. Jeffrey A. Levy, M.D. Katherine Lloyd, M.D. Peter T. Wright, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Theodore R. Stent. B.A., Talladega, 1944; M.D., Meharry, 1948

Assistant Professors of Cliiiical Radiology

Jeanne Armstrong. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952 Christopher A. Johnson. B.A., Howard, 1943; M.D., 1947 Laurencia B. Regalado. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1957 Lawrence C. Roach. B.A., Saskatchewan (Canada), 1958; M.D., 1960

Assistant Clinical Professors

Yuthana Samroengraja. M.D., Chulalongkorn Hospital Medical School, 1965 Abdulhamid R. Vazir. M.D., Bombay, 1942

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY Chomyong K. Charoenkul, M.D. Gilles M. Hendrick, M.D.

RADIOLOGY REHABILITATION MEDICINE 129

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors of Clinical Radiology

Nathaniel Finby. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1938; M.D., 1942

Richard D. Kittridge. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954

Clinical Professors

Kuo-York Chynn. B.S., National Tung-Chi (Shanghai), 1945; M.D., 1949; M.S., St. Louis,

1954 Virginia Kanick. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Jeanne W. Baer. B.S., Connecticut, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964 John T. Hsu. M.D., National Defense (Taiwan), 1957 Leonard M. Liegner. B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Efthimios C. Spyropoulos. M.D., Athens, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Carol L. Hilfer. B.A., Barnard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971 Anita G. Moallem. B.S., Brooklyn, 1960; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964 William I. Shaw. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1962 Alvaro Vallejo. M.D., Del Valle (Colombia), 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Ina A. Altman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1956; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1960 Frank M. Dain. B.A., Dartmouth, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1945 David S. Marsden. Ph.D., Jefferson, 1968 Harold L. Stitt. B.A., Colorado, 1953; M.D., 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

RADIOLOGY (s^^Xan B. Rubin, M.D.

Manoochehr Abiri, M.D. Theodora Serban, M.D.

Sidney D. Bogart, M.D. Susan M. Tuck, M.D.

Sidney Gentin, M.R.C.P.E. Peter K. Yeunq, M.D. Paul Khoury, M.D.

Robert A. Phillips, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Hi-Jung Pyun, M.D. Morris Hodara, M.S. Sabino J. Rizzo, M.D. Kenneth T. Rogers, D.O.

Rehabilitation Medicine

Simon Baruch Professor and Chairman

John A. Downey. M.D., Manitoba, 1954; D.Phil., Christ Church (Oxford), 1962; F.R.C.P.

130 REHABILITATION MEDICINE

At Presbyterian Hospital

Associate Professor

Lucien J. Cote (also Neurology). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954

Associate Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Erwin G. Gonzalez. B.A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1962; M.D., 1967 Stanley J. Myers. B.A., New York University, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961

Senior Research Associate

Leon T. Kremzner. Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955

Assistant Professor

Larry J. Crawshaw (also Pharmacology). B.A., California, 1964; Ph.D., 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Adele C. Germaine. B.A., Connecticut College, 1969; M.S., O. T.R., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors

Cayetano C. Co. A.A., St. Tomas, 1949; M.D., 1954

Antonio Cocchiarella. M.D., Bari (Italy), 1953

Francis J. Foca. B.S., Fordham, 1957; M.D., Bologna (Italy), 1966

Carolina O. McCagg. B.A., Barnard, 1962; M.D., Yale, 1966

Jonathan R. Moldover. B.A., Trinity (Connecticut), 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Damyanti G. Moorjani (also Pediatrics). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant (Bombay), 1957

Naomi L. Turner. B.A., San Francisco Xavier (Bolivia), 1948; M.D., 1956

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

REHABILITATION MEDICINE REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Alfred Hess, D.O. Adrienne Falk Bergen, B.A., C.P.T.

Keith C. Keeler, M.D. (at Blythedale

(at Morristown Children's Hospital)

Memorial Hospital) Glenn F. Hutnick, B.A.

Howard Liss, M.D. Vivenne Katz, M.S.

Charles R. Marshall, M.D. Robert J. Mitchell

Jay S. Mendelsohn, M.D. Anthony V. Porcelli, M.D.

Robert Stone, M.S. Patricia A. Richards, M.D. (at Blythedale (at Blythedale

Children's Hospital) Children's Hospital)

Kathleen R. Watson, STAFF ASSOCIATE

M.B.B.S. Daniel Eugene Lemons, M.S.

REHABILITATION MEDICINE 131

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Albert D. Anderson (A. David Gurewitsch Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Harvard, 1952

Associate Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Herbert L. Thornhill. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1951; M.D., Howard, 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Yasoma B. Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1963

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning (in Pediatrics). B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professor

Wanda Brodzka. M.D., Academy of Medicine (Warsaw), 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

REHABILITATION MEDICINE REHABILITATION MEDICINE PHYSICAL THERAPY

Louise Weiss, M.A. Ivan T. Donev, M.D. Felicitia E. Clare, B.S.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL ii ^"'^* j r^°M k k k* r> ASSISTANT IN

PHYSICAL THERAPY lluminado C. INeOaD, M.L). OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Joseph A. Malloy, M.A. Sandhya E Zarapkar, ^ixane L. Waithe, M.A.

Intermediate Sci.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Arun Kuman Bhattacharyyan. Intermediate Sci., Bangabasi (Calcutta), 1950; M.D., Nilra-

tan Sirca Medical College (Calcutta), 1955 Sally Wisely. B.A., Radcliffe, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1967

Assistant Clinical Professor

Rodolfo L. Reyes. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1952

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Wen-Ling L. Fan, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Keith C. Keeler, M.D.

132 REHABILITATION MEDICINE

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lucille T. Pai. M.D., Woman's Christian Medical College (Shanghai), 1941

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE Ravi Raj Malpe, M.B., B.S.

Occupational Therapy

Associate Professor

Barbara Neuhaus (acting director of program). B.A., Keuka, 1950; O.T.R., Columbia, 1952; M.A., Columbia, 1960; Ed.D., 1980

Assistant Professor of Clinical Occupational Therapy

Gordon Williamson. B.A., Emory, 1968; M.S., Columbia, 1970; M.Phil, 1976; Ph.D., 1978

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Margaret Ann Brown,

M.A. Nedra P. Gillette, M.Ed. Schone Pang, M.S. Diane Shapiro, M.A. Eleanor V. Shelly, B.S.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Cheryl Colangelo, M.S. Laurelee Hawkins, B.S. Patricia A. Miller, M.A. Roberta Roth, M.S.W.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Susan M. Durfee, B.S. Janet Falk-Kessler, M.A. Frances Kraver, B. S.

Physical Therapy

Associate Professors

Ruth Dickinson (director of program). B.S., Russell Sage, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1947 Althea M. Jones. B.S., Panzer College of Physical Education, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1972

Assistant Professors

Bernadette Hecox. B.S., Columbia, 1968; M.A., 1973

Thomas J. Schmitz. B.S., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1972; M.S., Boston, 1974

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Theodore Corbitt, M.A. Patricia Sullivan, M.A.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Margaret Beyda, B.S. Barbara Hanley, M.S. Joseph A. Malloy, B.S.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Marion Marx, M.A.B.S. Georgia Reidel, B.S. Kathy A. Sack, B.S. Diane Zuck, B.A.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Ann B. Edgar, B.S. Laurel M. Franklin, C.P.T. Pamela Harris, B.S.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

James Kruse, M.S. Lindi Oberon, B.S. Ann L. Ovellette, B.A. Jeanine Paxton, B.S. Paul Ribera, M.A. Joan Smith, B.S. Patricia Storjohann, M.A. Joan E. Thomas, B.S. Karen Tobman, M.A. Diane L. Waithe, M.A.

SURGERY 133

Surgery

Valentine Mott Professor and Johnson & Johnson Distinguished Professor and Chairman

Keith Reemtsma. B.S., Idaho State, 1945; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

R. Peter Altman. B.A., Colgate, 1955; M.S., Rochester, 1958; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1961 Frank Gump. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., New York University, 1955 David V. Habif (Morris and Rose Milstein Professor). B.S., Columbia, 1936; M.D., 1939 Mark A. Hardy. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Frederic P. Herter (Hugh Auchincloss Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., 1944 Robert B. Hiatt. B.S., Wilmington, 1938; M.D., Cincinnati, 1942 Thomas C. King. B.A., Utah, 1950; M.D., 1954; M.A., Missouri, 1963 John M. Kinney. B.A., Denison, 1943; M.D., Harvard, 1946 Thomas J. Krizek. B.S., Marquette, 1954; M.D., 1957; M.A., Yale, 1974 John B. Price, Jr. M.A., Texas, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1950

Professors of Clinical Surgery

Harold G. Barker. B.A., Utah, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1943

Frederick O. Bowman, Jr. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1952

Bard Cosman. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

Carl R. Feind. B.A., Texas, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Alfred M. Markowitz. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1952 Arthur B. Voorhees, Jr. B.A., Virginia, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Associate Professors

David Bregman. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1965 Paul Lo Gerfo. B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1961; M.S., 1963; M.D., State

University of New York (Upstate), 1967 Henry M. Spotnitz. B.A., Harvard, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Associate Professor of Pathology

Nicole Suciu-Foca. B.S., Bucharest (Rumania), 1954; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgery

Joseph A. Buda. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

Kenneth Forde. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Alfred Jaretzki III. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D.,1944

Frederick R. Randall. B.S., Howard, 1942; M.D., 1945

Francis C. Symonds, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Bashir Ahmad Zikria. B.S., George Washington, 1954; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1958

134 SURGERY

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert G. Bertsch. B.A., Carleton, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957

Charles W. Findlay. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

David M. Ju. M.D., National Medical College (Shanghai), 1944; MedSc.D., Columbia,

1954 Sven Kister. B.A., Dartmouth, 1955; M.D., Harvard, 1958 George C. Peck. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., Maryland, 1953 John N. SchuUinger. B.A., Princeton, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Senior Research Associate

William H. Dobelle. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1964; Ph.D., Utah, 1974

Senior Research Associate in Biochemistry

David Elwyn. B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

Mary H. McGrath. B.A., NewRochelle, 1966; M.D., St. Louis, 1970 Roman Nowygrod. B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970 George J. Todd B.S., lona, 1970; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1974 Collin J. Weber. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Irving Goodman. B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., 1944

Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery

Ivo p. Janecka. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Paul H. Gerst. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952

Leif O. Holgersen. B.A., Taylor, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1965 Peter S. Liebert. M.D., Harvard, 1962

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSCXIATES

Malayappa Jeevanandam, Ph.D. Narihito Kuromoto, M.D.

Duncan L. McCollester, Ph.D. Harold Lazar, M.D.

Shanta M. Modak, M.D., Ph.D. Esther Meyer, M.A.

Otto A. Szekely, M.D. Kazunari Satake, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY SPECIAL LECTURERS

Vincent W. Ansanelli, M.D. William A. Gardner, M.D.

Robert G. Blabey, M.D. Raffaele Lattes, M.D.

Harold M. Bruck, M.D. Thomas SantuUi, M.D.

Sherman M. Bull, M.D.

Leslie Mark Kutscher, M.D. LECTURERS

Mark David Sherman, M.D. Shivaji B. Bhonslay, M.D.

Charles A. Slanetz, M.D. George Escher, M.D.

James S. Todd, M.D.

' WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Harry Schwartz, Ph.D.

Jerome Martin Dubroff, M.D.

Hiroshi Hasheguchi, M.D.

German Lipovetsky, Ph.D.

Rita Lipton, B.A.

SURGERY 135

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgery

David A. Blumenstock. B.A., Union (Schenectady), 1949; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Associate Clinical Professors

Rodman D. Carter (in Urology). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 John E. Olson. B.A., Kansas, 1953; M.D., 1956

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

James Bordley IV. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Patrick Allen Dietz. B.A., Holy Cross, 1966; B.M. Sci., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard,

1970 Roger W. MacMillan III. B.S., Trinity, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Edward J. Carey, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958

Webster J. Stayman. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1966; M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1970

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Surgery

Harold P. Freeman. B.A., Catholic, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1958

Associate Clinical Professors

David M. Carberry. Ph.D., Providence, 1947; M.D., Jefferson, 1951

Harold A. Games. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1951

John E. Hutchinson. B.S., Moorehouse, 1953; M.D., Meharry, 1957

Robert F. Morton. M.D., Meharry, 1944

John W. Parker, Jr. B.A., Fisk, 1942; M.D., Meharry, 1945

Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology

Lee David Eisenberg. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

Barbara Barlow. B.A., New York University, 1946; D.D.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1953 Ganepola A. Ganepola. B.S., Kyoto, 1966; M.D., 1967 Mohamad H. Parsa. B.S, Tehran, 1957; M.D., 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

Salvatore G. Cinque. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.D., Loyola, 1946

Rajinder P. Gandhi. M.B.B.S., Institute of Medicine (Mandalay), 1966

James E. C. Norris. B.A., Hampton Institute, 1953; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1957

Ruben Oropeza. B.S., Mexico, 1948; M.D., 1955

Carlton E. Patrick. M.D., University of the Saar (Hamburg, Germany), 1957

136 SURGERY

Assistant Clinical Professor of Neurological Surgery

Robert W. Schick. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL SURGERY INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

Matthew D. Branche, M.D. NEUROSURGERY

Urbano K. Guarin, M.D. George V. DiGiocinto, M.D.

Malcolm MoleyM^D INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

Pierre G. Van Bockstaele, M.D. ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ^'^'^"^ L- ^'"S, M.D.

SURGERY

^^ J .. w D J XX r. ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

Dodatta V. Bender, M.D. ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Alden G. Cockburn, M.D. Bamett Miller, M.D.

Egel Francois, M.D. Michael Rapak, M.D.

Edoardo Giuliani, M.D.

Robert W. Holtzman, M.D. ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

Avtar S. Josen, M.D. SURGERY

William L. King, M.D. Roger Antoine, M.D.

Bamett Miller, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professor

Richard W. Brenner. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Associate Clinical Professors

David Befeler. BA., Columbia, 1955; M.D., 1959 Bruce J. Brener. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Harvard, 1966 Robert Specht. B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Assistant Clinical Professors

John H. Cooper. B.S., Lawrence, 1947; M.B.A., Chicago, 1949; M.D., 1954

Douglas M. Costabile. B.A., Muhlenberg, 1946; M.D., Geneva, 1951

John Joseph Hudock. B.S., Northwestern, 1944; M.D., 1948

Daniel L. Moore. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1958

John V. Triolo. M.S. Rochester, 1948; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1941

Charles J. Wittmann. B.A., Princeton, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES {continued)

SURGERY Morton Perkoff, M.D.

Frank F. Kaiser, M.D. Lester Silver, M.D.

Robert E. Knapp, M.D. Jerome Spivack, M.D.

Thomas Logio, M.D. E Bruce Whitesell, M.D. Charles Loguda, M.D. Saverio J. Panzarino, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors of Clinical Surgery

J. William Littler. B.S.. Duke, 1938, M.D.. 1942

SURGERY 137

Richard B. Stark. BA., Stanford, 1936; M.D., Cornell, 1941 Walter Wichern. B.S., Mount Union, 1942; M.D., Harvard, 1945

Clinical Professor

W. Graham Knox. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1942

Associate Professor

John G. Krai. M.A., Goteborg (Sweden), 1961; M.D., 1967; Ph.D., 1976

Associate Professor of Microbiology

George A. Hashim. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard G. Eaton. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1951; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1955

Joseph Ford. B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

George E. Green. B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D., 1956

Charles C. Harrold, Jr. B.S., Georgia, 1937; M.D., Harvard, 1941

Robert E. McCabe. B.A., Williams, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Robert E. Miller. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1957 Howard R. Nay. B.A., Virginia Military Institute, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956 James B. Rodgers. B.A., Virginia, 1944; M.D., 1948 Edward G. Stanley-Brown. M.D., Pennsylvania, 1948

Assistant Clinical Professors

Peter A. Bossart. B.A., Muhlenberg, 1947; M.D., Cornell, 1951 Thomas Dailey. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Cornell, 1961 Robert T. Edmonds. B.A., Harvard, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951 Paul D. Harris. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Conrad G. Lattes. B.S., Swarthmore, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1963 James A. MacDonald. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1950 Haroutane A. Mekhjian. B.S., American (Beirut), 1961; M.D., 1965 Robert J. Mulcare. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961 Carl S. Oakman. B.A., Harvard, 1938; M.D., Tufts, 1943 James H. Terry, Jr. B.S., Arizona, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Chin Bor Yeoh. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

SURGERY SURGERY {continued)

Arnold H. Belgraier, M.D. Farid J. Khoury, M.D.

Charles R. Blair, M.D. Danne R. Lorieo, M.D.

Gregory W. Brabbee, M.D. Stephan G. Lynn, M.D.

Peter B. Cinelli, M.D. Richard A. Marks, M.D.

Hiramn Sedgwick Cody, M.D. Antoine S. Munther, M.D.

John F. Crowe, M.D. William G. Ramey, M.D.

Clayton R. De Haan, M.D. Walter H. Stingle, M.D.

Clarence A. Dunn, Jr., M.D. Paul I. Tomljanovich, M.D.

Peter B. Fodor, M.D. Hiroshi Washio, M.D. Philip E. Gordon, M.D.

Joshua M. Kaplan, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Richard H. Karpinski, M.D. Mikio Kamiyama, Ph.D. John J. Keyser, M.D.

138 UROLOGY

Urology

John K. Lattimer Professor and Chairman

Carl A. Olsson. B.A., Bowdoin, 1959; M.D., Boston, 1963

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor of Clinical Urology

Ralph J. Veenema. B.A., Calvin, 1952; M.D., Jefferson, 1945

Associate Professors

Jerry G. Blaivas. B.A., Tufts, 1964; M.D., 1968.

Ralph De Vere White. B.Ch., BAO., University College (Dublin), 1964; M.D., 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Myron Tannenbaum. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D., 1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Urology

Peter J. Puchner. B.A., Carleton, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Nicholas A. Romas. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Associate Clinical Professors

Stanley B. Braham. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947 Frank W. Longo. B.S., Maryland, 1951; M.D., 1955

Myron S. Roberts. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1954

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Philip Tomashefsky. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistant Professors of Clinical Urology

John D. Birkoff. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Terry W. Hensle. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1964; M.D., Cornell, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professors

Elliot L. Cohen. B.A., New York University, 1963; M.D., Chicago, 1967

Peter N. De Sanctis. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1962

J. Timothy Donovan. M.D., New York Medical College, 1948

Louis J. Dougherty. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

John P. Grant. B.A., Amherst, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Michael H. Wechsler. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1961; M.D., St. Louis, 1965

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

UROLOGY UROLOGY John Kallos, B.Sc.

Leonard J. Rudin, M.D. Richard Kroll, M.D.

Charles E. Umhey, Jr., M.D. Harris M. Nagler, M.D.

UROLOGY 139

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Professor of Clinical Urology

David Blumenstock. B.S., Union College, 1949; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Clinical Professor

John E. Olson. B.A., Kansas, 1953; M.D., 1956

Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery

Rodman D. Carter. B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Assistant Professors of Clinical Urology

James Bordley IV. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Patrick Allen Dietz. B.A., Holy Cross (Worcester), 1966; B.Med Sci., Dartmouth, 1968;

M.D., Harvard, 1970 Roger W. MacMillan. B.S., Trinity, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Edward J. Carey, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958

J. Webster Stayman. B.A., St. Lawrence, 1965; M.D., Jefferson, 1970

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Bruce MacDonald, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert R. White. B.A., Amherst, 1949; M.D., Rochester, 1954

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES (continued)

UROLOGY Joseph S. Ritter, M.D.

Kenneth L. Day, M.D. Morey Wosnitzer, M.D. Pascal A. Pironti, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Russell W. Lavengood, Jr. B.A., St. Joseph's (Indiana), 1947; M.D., Louisville, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Manuel Fernandez. M.D., Coimbra (Portugal), 1956

Perrin B. Snyder. B.S., New York University, 1929; M.D., 1933

Joseph N. Ward. M.B., B.Ch., University College (Dublin), 1949

140 UROLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professors

William J. Nelson. B.A., Williams, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1946 Robert D. Wickham. B.A., Drew, 1947; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

UROLOGY

Arumbi P. Subramaniam,

M.D. Pellegrino J. Tozzo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Philip C. Cea, M.D. Harry S. David, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Alfred F. Fretz, M.D. Waleed G. Maloof, M.D. Constantine Photos, M.D. Joseph D. Putignano,

M.D. Alexander Sotiropoulos,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Rudolph D. Talarico,

M.D. James W. Vastola, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

UROLOGY

Abas Rezvani, M.D.

Damir Velcek, M.D.

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1981

Adams, Roberta H. Children's Hospital Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts. Pediat- rics Aiken, Brenda. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Aidea, Gabriel S. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Altshuler, Steven L. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Flexible Amador, Jorge L. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Apfelbaum, Mark A. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Appleton, Abraham T. St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New

York, New York. Surgery Aranow, Robert B. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Arildsen, Ronald C. Navy Regional Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland. Medicine. Auletta, Maria. Somerset Hospital, Somerville, New Jersey. Family Practice Ausubel, Kalman. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Medicine Bauman, Phillip A. St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Surgery Beane, Susan J. Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia. Medicine Beitz, Julie G. Roger Williams General Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island. Medicine Broom, Michael J. Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut. Surgery Butler, Annette L. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Byrne, Jeffrey M. University of Massachusetts Coordinated Programs, Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Family Practice Cagliostro, Stephen. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Capaldo, Maria E. Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, California. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Carson, JoAnn. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Castiglione, Charles L. Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut. Surgery Chandra, Elizabeth S. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Medicine Cohen, Paul J. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Pathology Cohen, Ron. University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, Virginia. Medicine CoUymore, Victor A. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Colon-Linares, Juan. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Obstetrics and Gynecol- ogy Cotto, Sonia. North Carolina Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Family

Practice Cutillo, Robert P. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Degreef , Gustav. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Psychiatry Dhungel, Rajiv U. L.A. County-US.C Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Ophthal- mology Diao, Edward. Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Diaz, Angela. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Dick, Alison B. Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio. Flexible Drucker, Elizabeth A. St Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (St Luke's Division), New

York, New York. Medicine Drury, Bernard J. University of California (Davis) Medical Center, Sacramento, Califor- nia. Surgery Ehrlich, Carol M. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Elliott, Deirdre D. St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Psychiatry Esposito, Robert M. St Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Surgery Feit, David L. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine

142 FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1981

Feld, Randy J. North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, New York. Medicine Flatow, Evcin L. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. Surgery Freedman, Susan D. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Freyberg, Christopher W. Charity Hospital, New Orleans, Louisiana. Medicine Gendler, Ellen C. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Gertler, Jonathan P. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Sur- gery Glantz, Sanford D. Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, New York. Surgery Goldberg, David M. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Goldstein, Nannette. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Flexible Golub, Robert M. McGaw Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois. Medicine Gravallese, Ellen M. Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Grossi, Eugene A. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Surgery Grunberg, Eva L. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Hayes, Dewleen G. Christ Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio. Medicine

Holubowitch, Edward J. University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, Virgin- ia. Family Practice Hresko, Michael T. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Katzman, Michael. Case Western Reserve University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland,

Ohio. Medicine Keefe, Bernadette. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Kellman, Howard D. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Kirby, Mathis A. Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia. Surgery Kleiman, Neal S. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Medicine Kutscher, Martin L. St. Christopher's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Kwon, Peter H., Jr. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Surgery Landaw, Irene S. Children s Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Lcindy, Harold S. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Pediatrics Lanzara, Barbara L. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine/Flexible Le, Xuan Ha T. Children's Hospital of Northern California, Oakland, California. Pediat- rics Lee, Timothy L. Long Beach Veterans Administration Hospital, Long Beach, Califor- nia. Medicine Lehmann, Harold P. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Levin, Marc S. Barnes Hospital Group, St. Louis, Missouri. Medicine Levine, Alice C. N.Y.U. Veterans Administration Hospital, New York, New York. Medi- cine Lipman, Steven P. University of Colorado Affiliated Hospitals, Denver, Colorado. Sur- gery Louard, Rita J. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Lubka, Rhonda. L.A. County- U.S. C Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Surgery Lud wig, Robert L. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Markowitz, Steven B. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Medicine Marshall, Mitchell H. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Medicine Miro, Claudio L. St. Barnabas Medical Center, Livingston, New Jersey. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Moss, Barbara A. Waterbury Hospital, Waterbury, Connecticut. Medicine Moy, Larry. St Francis Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut. Surgery Muraszko, Karin M. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Murphy, Stephen G. University of Massachusetts Coordinated Programs, Worcester, Massa- chusetts. Surgery Muschel, Michael J. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Nercessian, Ohannes A. Washington University Affiliated, St. Louis, Missouri. Surgery Nerenstone, Stacv R. Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine

FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1981 143

Oppedisano, Carlyn A. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Orland, Steven M. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Surgery Ozick, Lisa A. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Patsos, Theodore J. St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Pellicone, John T. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Medicine Peress, Richard E. St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York,

New York. Surgery Perofsky, Howard J. SUNY- Upstate Medical Center, Syracuse, New York. Surgery Petchler, Janet C. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Pediat- rics Raby, Khether E. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Regan, Raymond F. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Richmond, Kenneth H. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Rifkin, Terry P. North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, New York. Obstetrics and

Gynecology Rogers, David M. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Rosenfield, Howard T. Menninger Foundation, Topeka, Kansas. Psychiatry Rosenthal, Robert B. San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, California. Family

Practice Ross, Richard S. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Rozmaryn, Leo M. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Surgery Rudolph, Michael A. Mount Zion Hospital, San Francisco, California. Surgery Sabir, Rafiq. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Flexible Sax, Frederic L. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Scantlebury, Velma P. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Surgery Seely, Ellen W. Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Shah, Dipti V. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Shear, Michael P. University of Southern Florida Affiliated Hospitals, Tampa, Flori- da. Medicine Shookster, Linda A. Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island. Medicine Siegel, Robert D. Barnes Hospital Group, St. Louis, Missouri. Medicine Sisti, Michael. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Small, Peter A. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Smithy, William B. St Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Surgery Sobelson, Gary A. Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. Family

Practice Solomon, Perry H. Temple University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Surgery Speert, Peter K. St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Flexible Stein, Neil H. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Stem, Frederic A. Virginia Mason Hospital, Seattle, Washington. Flexible Stoler, Joan M. New England Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts. Pediatrics Stone, Gary C. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Teitelbaum, Joanne. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Thea, Donald M. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Valdes, Martin. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Vaughan, Luke M. Stanford University Hospital, Stanford, California. Orthopedic

Surgery Voutsas, Andrea K. North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, New York. Medicine Wagman, Robert D. Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Canada. Surgery Warren, Susan E. The New York Hospital -Westchester Division, White Plains, New

York. Psychiatry

144 FIRST-YEAR APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1981 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982

Wasko, Margery L. Rainbow Babies and Children 's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. Pediatrics Weidenbaum, Mark. St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Surgery Weinstein, Beth. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Psychiatry Weiss, Michael J. St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Widman, Lawrence E. Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland. Medicine Williams, John V. University of Miami Affiliated Hospitals, Miami, Florida. Medicine Wilson, Scott N. Salem Hospital, Salem, Massachusetts. Medicine

Wiseman, Gloria D. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Pediat- rics Wollack, Jan B. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Wood, Charles M. University of Oregon Health Sciences Center, Portland, Oregon. Medi- cine Wu, Gloria. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Yepes, Martha C. Children 's Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Young, Grace M. Children's Hospital National Medical Center, Washington, D.C. Pediat- rics Younger, David S. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Medicine Zahl, Kenneth J. Baylor College Affiliated, Houston, Texas. Pediatrics Zinberg, Joel M. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Zinberg, Jonathan. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine ZoUo, Kenneth A. Children's Hospital National Medical Center, Washington, D.C. Pediat- rics

Student Roster: Class of 1982

Abrams, Elaine Janine Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Princeton, 1978

Absatz, Michael Glenn Plainview, N.Y. B.E.S., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Adler, Frederick William New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978

Aldoroty, Robert Arthur Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1976; M.A., Columbia, 1978

Almquist, Robert Earl Bergen, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Amchin, Jess David Farmingdale, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978

Andrew, Susan Louise Easthampton, Mass. Sc.B., Brown, 1976

Aranoff, Jonathan Neil Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Beekman, Karen Press Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978

Bellin, Eran Yitzchak Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Bernstein, Guy Thomas Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Brown, 1978

Bezier, Jeffrey Lee Peshtigo, Wi. B.A., Princeton, 1978

Birkenbach, Mark Philip Kildeer, 11. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Blackwell, Thomas Keith Greenville, S.C. B.S., Duke, 1978

Blades, Edmond William Melrose, Mass. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Boruchoff, Susan Elise Newton Centre, Ma. B.A., Radcliffe, 1977

Brauser, Steven Donald Woodbury, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Brenner, Gail Monsey, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1978

Brigham, Steven Chase Toledo, Oh. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1978

Brooks, Robert Louis Sharpsburg, Md. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1974;

M.S., Maryland, 1976; Ph.D., 1978 Brown, Florence M. Evanston, 11. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Bryk, Eli New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Buchness, Mary Ruth Catonsville, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Bums, Elisa Eve Bethpage, N.Y. B.A., Colgate, 1978 Cammisa, Frank P. Waterbury, Ct. B.S., Tufts, 1978 Campbell, Susan Elizabeth New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1975 Cantor, Michael Gary Massapequa, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Cherup, Lori Lyn Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1976

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982 145

Chua, Streamson C. Kingston, N.Y. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Clair, Darren Francis New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1976

Cody, William Collins Mountain Lakes, N.J. B. A.. Dartmouth. 1978

Cohen, Jeffrey Lewis Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Daly, James Savannah, Ga. B.A., St. Leo (Florida), 1978

Danso, Alex New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1976

Dash, Greg I. Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978

del Alcazar, Carlos Oscar North Bergen, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Delfs, Richard Michael Tucson, Az. B.A., Arizona, 1976

Devlin, Michael James Bardonia, N.Y. B.A.. Princeton, 1978

Derby, James Alan Schuylerville, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1978

Deri, John New York. N.Y. B.A., Columbia. 1973

Dermody, Terence Shawn Ithaca, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1978

Downey, Susan E. New York, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1978

Doyle, Werner Karim Port Jefferson Station, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978

Durand, David Bradley Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978

Easton, Jonathan New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Endow, Curtis S. Stockton, Ca. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1977

Endrizzi, Donald Peter Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Fabiano, Fredric Boston, Ma. B.S., Boston, 1978

Feinberg, Richard Ira Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Trinity, 1977

Fiero, Thomas Patrick Brooklyn. N.Y. B.A. Columbia, 1977

Fletcher, Christopher Wallace Wellesley, Ma. B.A., Wesleyan, 1978

Formichella, Donna Jean Bridgeport, Ct. B.S., Providence, 1978

Frank, David Lawrence Meadowbrook, Pa. B.A., Williams, 1978

Gelbfish, Gary Alexander Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1978

Gilchrist, Ian Charles Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978

Gomez, William New York, N.Y. B.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, N. Y., 1976

Grant, Gail Patrice Charleston, S.C. B.A., Yale, 1978

Greenberg, Steven Marc Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Gresalfi, Thomas John Lake Grove, N.Y. B.S.. SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978

Griswold, Jonathan DeWitt Stratford, Ct. B.S., M.S., Yale, 1978

Harmon, Valerie Lorraine Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Brown, 1978

Harrington, William Neelis Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1974

Hart, Craig Parsippany, N.J. B.A., Pennsylvania. 1973

Honig, Peter K. Bellerose, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1978

Hutt, Douglas Allen Irvington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia. 1978

Jabs, Kathy Lee Bristol, Ct. B.S., Trinity, 1978

Jackness, Emily New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard. 1978

Karasik, Pamela Ellen Old Westbury, N.Y. B.A., Barnard. 1978

Kates, Mandes Roger New Haven. Ct. B.A., Princeton, 1974; Ph.D., Yale, 1978

Kessler, Paul David New York, N.Y. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1976

Kim, Sandra Joan Pearl River, N.Y. B.A., State University of New York (Stony Brook).

1978 King, Dennis K. Daytona Beach, Fl. B.A.. Middlebury. 1978 Knoll, Charles L. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn. 1978 Krauss, Eugene Steven Old Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Columbia. 1978 Krug, Joseph Hoffmann Englewood, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1978 Levens, David Jon Newton Centre. Ma. B.S.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1978 Levenson, Risa Catherine New York, N.Y. B.A.. Radcliffe, 1978 Li, Suzanne C. Roslyn, N.Y. B.S, Yale, 1978

Licht, Jonathan Daniel Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook). 1978 Lidofsky, Steven D. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1^75 Linder, Barbara L. New York, N.Y. B.S., Cornell. 1975 Lobel, Leslie Israel New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia. 1978

146 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982

Low, Julie Ann Belmont, Ma. B.A., Rochester, 1975

Lustbader, Ian Jay New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1978

Lynn, Richard Brian Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

McCormick, Paul Christian Rockville, Md. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Marchese, Michael John New York, N.Y. B.A., Rutgers, 1974

Margolis, Steven Fred Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1974

Markowitz, John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1976; M.A., 1978

Martin, Steven Carey Plainview, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Marzuk, Peter Michael New York, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1978

Mastropolo, Rosalie Mary Eastchester, N.Y. B.S.N., Rochester, 1976

Mazzocchi, Annmarie Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1978

Mehalek, Karen Edith Huntington Station, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1978

Mellstrom, Mark Stanley North Mankato, Mn. B.A., Carleton, 1978

Mercurio, Mark Randolph Ridgefield, Ct. B.A., Princeton, 1978

Mirski, Anna Marie Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., St. John's, 1978

Mitchell, Alfred Ernest Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Lafayette, 1978

Moffat, Gertrude Seidel Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977

Monasky, Mark Stephen Binghamton, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Potsdam), 1978

Montgomery, Michael O'Neill New York, N.Y. B.S., McGill, 1973

Moscona, Anne Chicago, II. B.A., Radcliffe, 1978

Muller, Adrienne Louise Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1978

Norton, Janet E. Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Nussbaum, Monte Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1978

Oesterling, Joseph Edwin Greensburg, In. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Olson, Stephen Eric Cooperstown, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1978

Park, William New York, N.Y.

Paul, Edward Mark Hicksville, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Pennoyer, Marguerite Anne Portland Me. B.A., Smith, 1978

Perez, Wilfredo De La C. Miami, Fl. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Pfeffer, Deborah Lynn New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1978

Philips, Mark Reid Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Plotycia, Steven Michael Eggertsville, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1978

Porder, Joseph Bernard New York, N.Y. B.A., Bennington, 1978

Price, Helen L. Summit, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1978

Quarmby, Robert Altamont, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1974; M.S., Rensselaer

Polytechnic Institute, 1978 Quartararo, Christopher Huntington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rayport, Steven G. Perrysburg, Oh. B.A., Harvard, 1975 Rini, Frank John New York, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1974; M.A., Columbia,

1976; M. Phil., 1977; Ph.D., 1978 Robbins, Peter Howard Fairlawn, N.J. B.A., Hamilton, 1978

Robbins, Philip Alan Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1978 Rodriguez, Jaime Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rodriguez, Rolando Francisco Weehawken, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Rosenblatt, Marc A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978 Rosenzweig, Seth Edward Freeport, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978 Roth, Philip New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975 Rottman, Jeffrey Nathan Berkeley, Ca. B.A., Princeton, 1976 Rubenfeld, Marian R. New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976 Ruzal, Carrie Brenda Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Salamone, Ronald Jerry East Brunswick, N.J. B.S., Stanford, 1977 Sanchez-Lluberas, Jorge A. Santurce, P.R. B.S., University of Puerto Rico, 1978 Schlaff, Anthony Lewis New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978 Schneider, Peter Andrew Hamburg, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977 Schulder, Michael Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Sealfon, Stuart C. Ncponsit, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1978

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1982 CLASS OF 1983 147

Sehgal, Evan David Chevy Chase, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Semrad, Carol Elizabeth New York, N.Y. B.A., Wisconsin, 1978

Shaffer, David Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978

Shaffer, Nathan New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1975

Sharp, Barbara Lea San Francisco, Ca. B.A., Yale, 1976

Sheinbaum, Roy Jonathan Woodmere, N.Y. B.Sc, McGill, 1978

Simkowitz, Philip New York, N.Y. B.S., Beloit, 1975

Sklar, Jeffrey Alan Laurelton, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1 978

Skowron, Gail East Northport, N.Y. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1978

Smith, Andre Leo New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1978

Smith, Mary Camden, N.Y. B.S., Houghton, 1978

Stevenson, Ellen Marie New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1977

Strongin, Jonathan David New York, N.Y. M.Phil, Columbia, 1976

Sullivan, John Keane New York, N.Y. B.A., Holy Cross, 1969; J.D., Fordham, 1972

Sultan, Mark Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1978

Suser, Ezra Saul Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1974

Tong, Dominic Jun Fai Honolulu, Hi. B.S., Hawaii (Monoa), 1978

Usatine, Richard Philip Nanuet, N.Y. B.S., Williams, 1978

Veenema, Kenneth Roy Glenrock, N.J. B.S., Cornell, 1977

Vita, Joseph Andrew Katonah, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Wasserman, Hal Stuart Springfield, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1978

Wellisz, Tadeusz Zbigniew New York, N.Y. B.A., Chicago, 1977

Whelan, Richard Lawrence Franklin Square, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1978

Wolff, David Marc New York, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1977

Wolfson, Steven Jay Valley Stream, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978

Yannopoulos, Aris Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Yorke, Eric Robert Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978

Zeralsky, Sandra Joan Pearl River, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1978

Student Roster: Class of 1983

Aldea, Peter A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Alonso, Jose Jr. Astoria, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Anderson, Rolf Leon Suffern, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Arliss, Jeffrey James Locust, N.J. B.S., Vermont, 1978

Bar, Michael Henry New York, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1979

Baran, Syma Deborah Levittown, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Basner, R. David New York, N.Y. B.A., City College (New York), 1974

Bauer, R. David Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Beck, Marc Lloyd New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Ben-Zvi, Jeffrey S. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1979

Black, Alexander Charlton Wellesley, Ma. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Bobella, Stephen Kurt Hackensack, N.J. B.A., Drew, 1979

Bonner, Matthew Kip Georgetown, Ct. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Boos, Stephen Charles Huntington Sta., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1979 Boyle, Allyson Bass Berkeley, Ca. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1975 Boyle, Thomas Hempstead, N.Y. B.S., State University of New York (Stony Brook),

1977 Breidbart, Scott Eric Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976 Brill, David Alan New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Brungraber, Margaret R. Lewisburg, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Bush, James William Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1979 Cahill, Peter duPont Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979 Camacho, Victor Emanuel Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979

148 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983

Camerino, Vicki Jean Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978

Camuto, Patricia Mary New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1976

Carpenter, Richard Owen Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.S., Duke, 1979

Caselli, Maria Milagros Bergenfield, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Caselli, Richard John Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Chalf in, Laura B. New York, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1 970

Chen, William Kuang-Yu New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Christopher, Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Davidson, Peter Killip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1977

Davis, Maris R. Oswego, N.Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1979

Davitz, Michael Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978

Desser, Terry Susan Beechhurst, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Dillon, John Joseph Yorktown Hts., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1978 Donnenberg, Michael Seth Levittown, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1979 Duralde, Xavier A. East Pointe, Ga. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Dushay, Kevin Maier Fayetteville, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979 Eaton, Bradford Hunter Pelham, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Erly, William Kenneth Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Haverford, 1978 Eskenazi, Loren Beth New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Feind, Carl Robert Alpine, N.J. B.S., Antioch, 1979 Felix, Alan David New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1979 Fiorito, Joseph John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Fisher, Margaret Elizabeth Haddonfield, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Florakis, George James Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Freilich, David Ira Brooklyn, N.Y. Brooklyn College Friedman, David Paul Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Gaines, Alan David Randolph, Ma. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1979 Garbowit, David Labe Pittsfield, Ma. B.S., Union, 1979 Genecin, Paul Baltimore, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1977 Glatt, Aaron Eli Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1979 Gliedman, Paul R. Wallkill, N.Y. B.S, Manhattan, 1979 Goldberg, Neal Benjamin Hartsdale, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1979 Goldman, Myla P. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979 Goldschmidt, Howard Zvi Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Goldstein, Michael D. Smithtown, N.Y. B.S, SUNY (Stony Brook), 1 979 Gomez, Yvonne Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Gonzalez, Christopher Lewis Claremont, Ca. B.A., Pitzer, 1979 Gonzalez, Victoria Mary Claremont, Ca. B.A., California State (San Francisco), 1979 Green, Nancy Sue Wabon, Ma. B.S., Tufts, 1979 Gutowski, Teddy Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1979 Hall, Walter Allan Falls Church, Va. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Hanau, Lawrence Huto Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Harris, David Alan New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1976 Hawke, Mary Wetherill Southampton, N.Y. B.A., Chicago, 1976 Hirschfield, Steven I. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1972 Ingram, David Lloyd Somerset, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1979 JoHe, Mark D. Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Johnston, Maria Milagros Bergenfield, N.J. B.A., Barnard, 1979 Jones, Leon D. Rome, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Kalb, Thomas Heller Palm Beach, Fl. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Kamer, RusseU Scott New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1979 Kastelman, James Steven Cranford, N.J. B.S., Princeton, 1979 Keller, Wendy A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1975 Klapper, Robert C. Far Rockaway, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 KoeHer, Susan Ellen Clarence, N.Y. B.A., Mt Holyoke, 1979

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983 149

Konecky, Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979

Kriger, Alberto Isaac Rio Piedras, P.R. B.A., Brandeis, 1979

Landry, Donald William Cambridge, Ma. B.S., Lafayette, 1975

Landzberg, Joel Serge Whitestone, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Lederman, Seth Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Letsou, George Vasilios Lowell, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Linfield, Louis S. II San Francisco, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Loomis, Karen Jay White Plains, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977

Lopez, Rafael Roberto New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Lowy, Israel Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1977

Luppescu, Neal Edwin Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Lustick, Martin Ross Watertown, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978

Lytton, William Winzer Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

McCord, Mary Marshall New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1978

Macfarlane, Michael Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Long Island (C W. Post), 1975

Mackey, Steven Lee South Columbus, Oh. B.A., Columbia, 1976

Maloney, William Joseph Warren, N.Y. B.A., Stanford, 1979

Mandel, Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Manley, John C. North Port, N.Y. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1977

Matathias, Daniel J. Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Matos, Sergio E. New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1979

Melfi, Robert Joseph Wood-Ridge, N.J. B.S., Creighton, 1979

Munro, Virginia Schaefer New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979

Neuberg, Gerald Walter Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Okun, Alexander Lawrence New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Ostrow, Steven Mark Baldwin, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979

Paek, In-Bok Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Pastor, Patricia Camuto Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1976

Pearl, Michael Lawrence Southfield, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1979

Perkins, Archibald Simon Williamstown, Ma. B.A., Williams, 1979

Perlmutter, Jeffrey Alan Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Peterson, Mark William Fort Collins, Co. B.S., Colorado State, 1979

Pierson, Richard Norris 111 Englewood, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1978

Pollak, Emil Martin Jr. Old Tappan, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Pollak, Jeffrey Scott New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Quinn, Brian James Wantagh, N.Y. B.S., State University of New York (Stony Brook),

1979 Quinn, Thomas Joseph Wantagh, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979 Rampil, Ira Jay Flushing, N.Y. B.E.S, SUNY (Stony Brook), 1 975 Randolph, Paula Ann Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1979 Retikas, Anthony Demetrios Akron, Oh. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1979 Rice, Louis Bernard Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977 Rich, Thomas Jonathan Flourtown, Pa. B.S., Bucknell, 1979 Ring, Wendy Susan Coral Gables, Fl. B.S., Yale, 1979 Roberts, William Gary Purchase, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Rochester, Carolyn Lee Charlottesville, Va. B.A., Smith, 1979 Rosenthal, Jonathan Harry New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1973 Rovit, Adam John Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Michigan, 1979 Sacks, Andrew Jay New York, N.Y. B.A., New College, 1975 Sacks, Evan Hilary Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979 Saver, Barry Gordon Cambridge, Ma. B.S., Yale, 1976 Schlesinger, Gail Michele Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Schoifet, Scott David Somerset, N.J. B.A., Cornell, 1979 Shapiro, Matthew Scott Hewlett, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1979 Simpson, Joseph Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979 Smires, Harvey Edward Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

150 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983 CLASS OF 1984

Smith, Ann Elizabeth Northport, N.Y. B.A., Washington, 1979

Smith, Judith Wilson Greenwich, Ct. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Spriegel, John Roberts Evanston II. B.S.E., Princeton, 1979

Starin, Lawrence Robert Spring Valley, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1979

Tannenbaum, Gary Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Thoron, Louisa New York, N.Y. B.A., Colorado, 1968

Vagelos, Randall Herodotus Watchung, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Van de Wiele, Barbara M. Alpine, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1977

Wang, Paul Johnson Indianapolis, In. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Wang, Timothy Cragin St. Louis, Mo. B.A., Williams, 1979

Wasscrman, Marcia Sue Syosset, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1973

Weinberger, Michael Laurence Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Weinstein, Lee Scott Woodmere, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1979

Weinstock, Martin New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1977

Weissman, Jane Lisa New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1977

Whitley, Barbara Ellen Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Syracuse, 1971

Widom, Barbara Santa Cruz, Ca. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Wilkens, James Burton Toledo, Oh. B.S, Ohio State, 1979

Wilner, Philip Jonathan Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Wimpfheimer, Miriam Jane New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1975

Winter, Eric Herbert New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Wissler, Richard Norris Canandaigua, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1974

Yolowitz, Greg Alan Spring Valley, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1979

Yu, Leonard Tobey New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977

Zigelman, Charles Z. Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Queens, 1979

Student Roster: Class of 1984

Adkins, Elijah Stanton III Salisbury, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Alland, David New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Alonso, Barbara Ann New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Arato, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Union, 1980

Ashmead, Duffield Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Baez, Ana Luisa New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1980

Bannister, Kyra Heather Georgetown, Ct. B.A., Vermont, 1980

Barasch, Jonathan Matthew New York, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

Belisle, James Thompson Babylon, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979

Bell, Robin EUen Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1975

Berkower, Alan Stewart Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Middlebury, 1974

Booker, Gail Michele Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Boschi, Alessandro Sebastian Port Chester, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Brem, Rachel Frydman Brookline, Ma. B.A., Brandeis, 1979

Brief! , David Ben Melville, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980

Brittis, Mary Ellen Yonkers, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1980

Brown, Michael Carlvan Yorktown Heights, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Cardenosa, Gilda New York, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1979

Chak, Amitabh Morgantown, W.V. B.A., Yale, 1978

Chan, Stephen Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Chietero, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1980

Christopher, Kenneth New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Clain, Michael Russell Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980

Coburn, Kenneth Doyle West Hempstead, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980

Cohen, Sally Eisenberg Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Goucher, 1964

Constantine, Sandra Mequon, Wi. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Desser, Terry S. Whitestone, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 151

Di Franco, Matthew Joaquin Santa Cruz, Ca. B.A., California (Santa Cruz), 1979

Draga, Aspasia E. Malba, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980

Egnor, Michael Robert Catskill, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Fallon, Regis Francis Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Fayter, Judith Ann Staten Island, N.Y. B.S., Pace, 1978

Fithian, Donald Cobum Bridgeton, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

Florin, Cynthia Ann New York, N.Y. B.S., Grinnell, 1975

Ford, Jean Guillaume Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Freeman, Phillip Sanford New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1975

Gallay, Brian James White Plains, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Gewirt2, George Robert Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Goldberg, Mark Paul Chicago, II. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Goldstein, Jeffrey Alan Southfield, Mi. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Gordon, Christopher P. HoUis, N.H. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

Goyal, Alok New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1980

Graff, Wayne Brian Merrick, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980

Graham, Jeffrey Scott Summit, N.J. B.A., Williams, 1980

Greenbaum, Linda Ellen New York City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Guthrie, Ellen Hobson Hilton Head Island, S.C. B.A., Colorado, 1980

Haspel,' Kenneth Lewis West Heirtford, Ct. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

Hibbard, Claire Alexandra New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Hsu, Ho-Wen Timonium, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Hyll, Marsha Karin Green Brook, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1975

Ivey, Louis Albert Silver Springs, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Jackson, Byron A. Shreveport, La. B.A., New York University, 1980

Jeevanandam, Valluvan M. New Milford, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Johnson, Gregory Kent Chestertown, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Johnston, Peter Shivers Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1969

Jules, Kethy Marie Elmhurst, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1980

Kao, Peter Nicholas New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Karlin, Scott Marc Greenlawn, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980

Kaye, Katherine Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Kazim, Michael Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Kellogg, Collins Frederick Croghan, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1977

Kim, Anthony Hyoung Queens, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980

Kim, Kami Albany, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Kimball, Robert Owen Geneva, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979

Krongrad, Amon New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Ku, Andrew Bergenfield, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Lang, Thomas Philip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

LaScala, Carlo Paul Port Jefferson, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980

Lattimer, Douglas Gary New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975

Leibenhaut, Mark Harris Oceanside, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Levin, Neil Chevy Chase, Md. B.S.E.S., Tufts, 1980

Lewis, Allison Elizabeth Menlo Park, Ca. B.S.E., Princeton, 1980

Liberman, Laura Newton, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Lombardo, Gregory Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1968

Love, Karen Anita Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1980

Luyando, Yvonne New York, N.Y. B.A., Fordham, 1980

Ma, Averil I. Thomwood, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

McDonagh, Kevin T. Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Magnes, Jeffrey New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1975

Mahon, John Henry Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Notre Dame, 1980

Markowitz, Arlene Helen Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Wellesley, 1980

Mathews, Donald Marshall Schenectady, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Miller, Steven Zane Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

152 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984

Milrod, Barbara Louise New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Modic, Frank Edward Scotia, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1980

Moss, William John Demarest, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980

Mulvey, Kevin Patrick San Francisco, Ca. B.S., San Francisco, 1980

Neustein, Steven Mark West Orange, N.J. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1980 Nimkin, Katherine New York, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978 Nordli, Douglas Ray Melville, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1980 Odrich, Marc Geoffrey Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 O'Keeffe, Richard Michael, Jr. Weston, Ma. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980 Olsen, Janet Louise Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Vassar, 1978 Olson, Eric Jon Chadds Ford, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Oquendo, Maria Antonia Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., B.A., Tufts, 1980 Palma, James New York, N.Y. City College of New York, 1980 Pawlowski, Ann Margaret Lunnfield, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Peng, Benjamin C. H. Kew Gardens, N.Y. B.A., Rochester, 1980 Pero, Robert Thomas Hyde Park, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Proano, Maritza New York, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1980 Rabbani, LeRoy E. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Rautenberg, Mark Alan Ithaca, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1980 Raymond, Elizabeth Gray Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Swarthmore, 1980 ReiUy, Philip Joseph New York, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1976 Reimold, Andreas Michael Dallas, Tx. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Rennert, Douglas Andrew New York, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1980 Roberts, James Wayne Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Rodrigues, Beatriz A. Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Romano, Thomas Jerome CamiUus, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1980 Rottkamp, John Robert Commack, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980 Ruiz, Frank Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1980 Saladini, Vincent Rocco, Jr. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Santos, Annabelle Villatuya HoUis, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Schmiedeberg, Phyllis N. Babylon, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1980 Schoen, Robert Edward Beverly Hills, Ca. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Schoenberg, Norman Island Park, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1980 Schriger, David Lawrence Englewood, N.J. B.A., Amherst, 1980 Schwartzbach, Gary C. Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Scuderi, Donna Marie Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980 Seymour, Neal Edward Oakdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Shaw, Andrey Shin-Yee New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Sheffield, Mary Katherine Longmeadow, Ma. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1980 Singer, Meriamne Bruche New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980 Somlo, Stefan Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Sorensen, Mark Francis Rockville Centre, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1980 Speirs, Robert Thomas Port Washington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Spriegel, John R. Evanston, II. B.S.E., Princeton, 1978 Stegall, Mark Dale Crosbyton, Tx. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Stork, Philip Jacques Stewart Englewood, N.J. 5.5., Harvard, 1977 Strachan, Alexander Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Fordham, 1980 Tamargo, Rafael Jesus Condado, P.R. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Teichman, Faye Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1980 Tilley, Robert John Tacoma, Wa. B.S., Washington, 1980 Torres, Ramon Antonio Bronx, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1980 Turey, Maureen New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976 Weber, Pamela Ann Buffalo, N.Y. B.S., McGill, 1980 Westermann, Robert Bayless West Hartford, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1980

STUDENT ROSTER; CLASS OF 1984 CLASS OF 1985 153

Westrich, David Joshua New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

Whitehurst James Howell Atlanta, Ga. B.S., Vanderbilt, 1979

Whitley, Markus Andrew Bowie, Md. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1980

Whitlock, Mary Elizabeth Tenafly, N.J. B. A., Smith, 1980

Wiedermann, Joseph Gad Englewood, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Winston, Julia Lynn Oakland, N.J. B.S., Bucknell, 1979

Wirth, Robert Lockridge, Palo Alto, Ca. B.S.E., Michigan, 1974

Witham, Rebecca Sue Needham, Ma. B.S., Yale, 1979

Wong, Shing-Chiu East Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Wong, Ting Hung New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1980

Yancopoulos, George Damis Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Yen, Catherine Eleanor Honolulu, Hi. B.S., Hawaii, 1979

Yuen, Jeffrey C. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977

Student Roster: Class of 1985

Abis, David Woodbourne, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1981

Aboody, Linda Rachel Westbury, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981

Alexander, Joseph James Stockton, Ca. B.S., California (Davis), 1981

Aviv, Jonathan Enoch Beverly Hills, Ca. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Avner, Jeffrey Ronald Bellerose Manor, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1981

Bachner, Evan Jay Syosset, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Bank, David Eugene Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Baruch, Alice M. Westchester, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1974; M.S., New York

Medical, 1979; Ph.D., 1981 Barzel, Eyal Bronx, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1981 Bass, Anne Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Batik, Odette G. New York, N.Y. B.S., Antioch, 1977; M.P.H, Columbia, 1981 Baum, Seth Joshua New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Benardo, Larry Steven Anaheim Hills, Ca. B.S., California (Irvine), 1977; Ph.D., Stanford,

1981 Bendixen, Birgitte Holt San Diego, Ca. B.A., California (San Diego), 1973; M.A., 1975;

C.Phil., 1977; Ph.D., 1980 Bindelglass, David Fred White Plains, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Bogosh, Samuel Winston Brookline, Ma. B.Sc, Harvard, 1981 Bolo, Peter Michael Grand Blanc, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1981 Brancati, Frederick Louis Dix Hills, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Branden, Peter John Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Johns Hopkins, 1981 Brennan, John Paul New York, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1975 Brovwi, Robin Renee Suitland, Md. B.S., Maryland, 1981 Brown, William C. Sparkhill, N.Y. B.S, SUNY (Binghamton), 1981 Brusco, Louis Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Canning, Robert Babylon, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Chan, Bemadette New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Chance, John Tighe Rutherford, N.J. B.A., Williams, 1981 Chang, Sophia Whasun McLean, Va. B.A., Amherst, 1981 Chang, Winjing New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1981 Chamey, Mark Alan Fullerton, Ca. B.S., Stanford, 1981 Coburn, Cynthia Ann New York, N.Y. Sc.B., Brown, 1980 Cohen, Seth Aloe Cambridge, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Coman, Eugene Anthony Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1981 Compaine, Andrew Guy Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Conde, Miguel Angel New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Grim, Julia Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Oberlin, 1978 Cushman, James Gordon Camp Hill, Pa. B.A., Washington, 1981

154 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985

Dalak, Gregory Wakeem Staten Island, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1981

Davol, Joan Evers New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1976

Deutsch, Nicholas Andrew East Hampton, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Diamond, Lisa Carol New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Dickson, David Gordon Lewiston, N.Y. B.S., Rochester, 1981

Dirbas, Frederick Mark Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Stanford, 1981

Downey, Robert John New York, N.Y. B.Sc., Yale, 1981

Duberman, Eric David Armonk, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Edeen, John Kearny, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Ehrlich, Martin Harvey New York, N.Y. B. A., Rochester, 1973

Emery, John Matthew Nassau, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Fallon, Brian Anthony Queens, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1976; M.Ed., 1978; M.P.H., Colum- bia, 1981

Flock, Timothy Joseph Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Freeman, Neil Joshua Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1979

Frend, Jeremy M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Frishman, Gary Nathan Armonk, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

Gabrieli, Christopher F.O. Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Geller, Arthur Jay East Brunswick, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Gerst, Steven Richard New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Geurts, Barbara Linda So. Plainfield, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1981

Gilson, Michael Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Glassman, Steven David Teaneck, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Gopal, Aasha S. E. Brunswick, N.J. B.A., Columbia 1979; M.Sc, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981

Gordon, Marc Lawrence Rochester, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Buffalo), 1975; M.A., 1976

Greenberg, Steven Mark Wyncote, Pa. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Gribetz, Richard 1. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1 975; B.H.L., M.A., Jewish Theologi- cal Seminary, 1979 , -T- L , Grinberg, Manuel Eduardo Roslyn, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

198l' Harding, James Sutherland Toledo, Oh. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Hardy, Russell Irving Brookline, Ma. B.A., Williams, 1978 Hershey, Mark David Brewster, N.Y. B. A., Rochester, 1981 Hill, Terri Lynn Columbia, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Hirschhorn, Lisa Ruth New York, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981 Hodges, Marian Osborne Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Hoffman, Jeffrey Greg Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981 Hong, Roy W. Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981 Housey, Gerard Mitchell Harper Woods, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1981 Hripcsak, George Michael Hicksville, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1981 Jacobs, Laurie Gail Pleasantville, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1981 Jennis, Andrew Abraham South Orange, N.J. B.A., Yale, 1981 Jones, James Irvin New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981 Jones, Valerie Teresa Montclair, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1981 Julien, Juana Maria Hialeah, Fl. B.S., Miami, 1981 Kaplan, Andrew Howard Melville, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981 Kaplan, Bruce Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1981 Kim, Albert Nelson New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Klumpar, David Ivan Lexington, Ma. Sc.B., Brown, 1981 Koeleveld, Robin Frederick Newport News, Va. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Kramer, Ethan Douglas Tuscaloosa, AI. B.A., Vassar, 1981 Laske, Douglas Walter Queens, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Levine, Nancy Setauket, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980 Lin, Christopher Chi-Ching Forest Hills, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985 155

Lloyd, Mary Ann Ellen Danville, Ca. B.S., San Francisco, 1981

Lodge, Henry Sears Beverly, Ma. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Maddon, Paul Jay Queens, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Madscn, Nancy Sue Wethersfield, Ct. B.S., Bates, 1981

Markowitz, David Daniel Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Swarthmore, 1981

Matthew, Thomas Lewis New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

McKenzie, Keith B. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

McNulty, John Michael West Nyack, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981

Mendez, Leonardo Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., Yale, 1981

Meng, Tze-Chiang New Rochelle, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Morrone, Lee Ellen Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1981

Moscoso, Juan Francisco Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., Michigan, 1981

Navedo, Andres Tadeo Arecibo, P.R. B.S., Puerto Rico, 1981

Nunez, Richard Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Oddone, Eugene Z. Colorado Springs, Co. B.S., Denver, 1981

Ores, David Joseph Leonia, N.J. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1981

Pacheco, Elba Milagros Ponce, P.R. B.A., Wellesley, 1981

Pak, Wonkyu Sunnyvale, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Pearsen, Kenneth Daniel Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Pollock, Roger Gerard Farmingdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Radoslovich, Glauco Andrew Cliffside Park, N.J. B.S., St Peter's, 1981

Reiser, Janet Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Rosen, Beth Alyse Massapequa, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Rosenblum, Nancy Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.Sc., Cornell, 1981

Ross, Lisa Anne Los Angeles, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Russo, Joseph Richard Huntington, N.Y. B.S., St. John 's (New York), 1981

Sampson, John George Warwick, N.Y. B.S. SUNY (Stony Brook), 1981; A.S., Orange

County Community, 1979 Satra, Karin Helene W. Paterson, N.J. B.A., Douglass, 1981 Schweitzer, Jana Tenafly, N.J. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1981 Seefeld, William C.R. Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1972; O.D., New England College of

Optometry, 1977 Segal, Bruce Arthur Weston, Ma. B.A., Clark, 1981 Shapiro, Janet Marjorie New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1981 Sheiman, Robert Glenn Yonkers, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1980 Shikora, Scott Alan Bellerose, N.Y. B.S., Muhlenberg, 1981 Shlasko, Edward Woodstock, N.Y. B.A., Oberlin, 1979 Siderides, Elizabeth Stamford, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Silbey, Mark Bennett Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1979; M.A., Rice, 1981 Simotas, Alexander C. Alphine, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Slater, Jonathan Allen New City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Spector, Paul Joseph New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1978 Stein, Michael David Cliffside Park, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Stopek, Alison Tami Plainview, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981 Straceski, Anthony Joseph E. Hartford, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Summit, Pamela Honey Merrick, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981 Taterka, James Andrew Englewood Cliffs, N.J. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981 Thadani, Vjay Michael Chevy Chase, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1976; M. Phil., Yale, 1978;

Ph.D., Yale, 1981 Theise, Neil David W. Hartford, Ct. B.A., B.A.S., Pennsylvania, 1981 Tissot, Marc Francis Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., CUNY (Queens), 1981 Touran, Touraj Tehran, Iran B.A., Princeton, 1981 Trehu, Stephen Marc Wilmington, De. B.A., Princeton, 1981 Veildes, Alfonso Jose Miami, ¥\. B.S., Miami, 1981 Villegas, Robert Arturo New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.S., St John 's (New York), 1981

156 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985

Walker, Benjamin Harrison New York, N.Y. B.A., Bowdoin, 1981

Warren, Wayne Scott Forest Hills, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1981 Weinthal, Joel Adam Pearl River, N.Y. B.S., Stanford, 1981 Weiss, Robert Marc N. Bellmore N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1981 Willenbucher, Robert Francis New York, N.Y. B.S., Rochester, 1981 Wiltz, Othon San Juan, P.R. B.S., Johns Hopkins, 1981 Wohl, Jodie Carol New York N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977 Wolf, David Gary Livingston, N.J. B.A., Yale, 1981 Yarmush, Joel Mann Brooklyn, N.Y. B.E., Cooper Union, 1977; M.A., Princeton, 1979;

Ph.D., Princeton, 1981 Zeller, Lawrence Ira New York, N.Y. M.S. W., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1974 Zuckerman, Alan Miles N. Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Index

Absence, leave of, 43

Academic discipline: see Regulations

Academic year; calendar, 3-5; divisions 44

Administration: Health Sciences, 6; Joint Administrative Board, 9; staff, 9

Admission(s): Committee on, 8, 27-28; application procedure, 27; require- ments, 27-28; application fee, 27, 30; to advanced standing, 28; of foreign students, 28

Administrative staff, 9

Advanced standing, 28

Advisory Committee to the Dean, Chair- men's, 8

Affiliated hospitals, 15-17, 23-26

Alpha Omega Alpha, 42

Alumni Association, 42

Anatomy: courses, 45

Anatomy and Cell Biology, Officers of instruction, 55-56

Anesthesiology: course, 46; officers of instruction, 56-59

Application: for degrees, 3-4, 31; for admission, 27-28; fees, 27, 30; for finan- cial aid, 33-41

Attendance, 29

Auditing courses, 29

Augustus C. Long Library, 18, 21

Awards, 40-41,51-52

Bard Hall, 13, 32-33

Bard Haven Towers, 14, 33

Bassett, Mary Imogene, Hospital, 16, 24

Biochemistry: course, 45; officers of instruction, 59-61

Biology: abnormal human, course, 44

Biophysics and biophysical chemistry, spe- cial program in, 51

Biostatistics, officers of instruction, 118

Calendar, Academic, 3-5

Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Re- search, 21-22

Center for Community Health Systems, 22

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, 50

Certificate in psychoanalysis, 50

Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the Dean, 8

Clinical genetics, special program in, 50- 51

College of Physicians and Surgeons: histo- ry, purpose, and location, 19, 20-21; program of instruction, 43-52

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, 12, 19-23

Columbia University: relation to P&S, histo- ry, 19, 20-21; library, 21; campus facili- ties, 41

Conduct, 29

Course numbers, key to, 44

Courses: electives, 43; summary of curricu- lum, 44; basic science and introductory clinical, 44-46; major clinical year, 46- 48; Fourth year, 48; for practicing physi- cians and specialists, 53

Curriculum: Committee on, 8; summary of, 44

Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, 6 Degrees: application dates, 3-4, 30-31; dates of award, 3-4; M.S., 50; M.D., 19, 49; Med. Sc.D., 53-54; Ph.D., 49, 50, 51; see also Certificate in psychoanaly- sis; National Board examinations Dental and Oral Surgery, School of, 21 Departments of Instruction, 55-140 Dermatology: course, 46; officers of

instruction, 61-62 Discipline, academic: see Regulations Doctor of Medical Science degree, 53-54 Doctor of Medicine degree, 19; in combina- tion with M.P.H. degree, 49; in combina- tion with Ph.D. degree, 49 Doctor of Philosophy degree; in combina- tion with M.D. degree, 49; in nutrition, 50; in biophysics and biophysical chemis- try, 51 Dormitories, 32-33

Emeriti officers, 9-11

Employment for spouses of students, 33

Endowed lectureships, 51

Endowed scholarship funds, 34-38

Environmental Health Sciences, officers of instruction, 118-19

Epidemiology, officers of instruction, 119- 20

Equipment: estimated cost of, 32; require- ment, 32

Executive Committee of the Faculty Coun- cil, 6

Expenses, estimated, 32; see also Fees

158 INDEX

Faculty Council: Executive Committee of the, 6; of the faculty of Medicine, 7-8

Faculty of Medicine, 6-11

Fees: payment of, 3; application, 27, 30; health service and hospital insurance, 30; late, 30; withdrawal and adjustment of, 31; see also Expenses, estimated

Financial aid, 33-41

Foreign students: admission of, 28; loans to, 38

Genetics: see Human Genetics and Devel- opment

Gift funds, 38

Grades and promotions, 43-44

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences: rela- tion to P&S, 49

Gynecology: see Obstetrics and Gynecol- ogy

Harlem Hospital Center, 15, 24

Health administration: officers of instruc- tion, 120-22

Health service, 30

Helen Hayes Hospital, 17, 24

History of the College and the University, 20-21

Hospitals teaching, 15-17, 23-26

Housing, 32-33

Human Genetics and Development: course, 45; officers of instruction, 62-64

Human nutrition, 22

Institute of Cancer Research, 21-22 Institute of Human Nutrition, 22 International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction, 22

Joint Administrative Board, 9

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center— Augustus Long Li- brary, 18, 21

Key to course numbers, 44

Leaves of absence, 43-44 Lectureships, endowed, 51 Libraries: Health Sciences, 18, 21; Univer- sity, 21,41 Loans, 38-40

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, 16, 24 Master of Science degree: in human nutri- tion, 50; in physical therapy and occupa- tional therapy, 50 Medical service to students, 30

Medicine: courses, 45, 46, 47; officers of instruction, 64-74

Microbiology: course, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 74-75

Microscopes, 32

Morristown Memorial Hospital, 24-25

National Board examinations, 5, 44

Neurological Surgery, officers of instruc- tion, 76

Neurology: teaching hospital, 23; courses, 47; officers of instruction, 77-80

Nondiscriminatory policies, statement of, 19-20

Nursing, School of, 20

Nutrition: course, 45; special programs in, 50; see also Institute of Human Nutrition

Obstetrics and Gynecology: teaching hospi- tal, 23; course, 47; officers of instruction, 80-84

Occupational therapy, see Physical Thera- py; Master of Science degree

Ophthalmology: teaching hospital, 23; offi- cers of instruction, 84-86

Orthopedic Surgery: teaching hospital, 23; course, 47; officers of instruction, 87-89

Otolaryngology: course, 47; officers of instruction, 89-90

Overlook Hospital, 17, 25

P&S Club, 42

Pathology: courses, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 91-96

Pediatrics: teaching hospital, 22; course, 48; officers of instruction, 96-103

Pharmacology: course, 46; officers of instruction, 103-5

Physical therapy and occupational therapy, special programs, in, 50; see also Reha- bilitation Medicine

Physicians and Surgeons: see College of Physicians and Surgeons

Physiology: courses, 45, 46; officers of instruction, 105-6

Population and Family Health, officers of instruction, 122-23

Postgraduate Programs, 53-54

Presbyterian Hospital, 9, 23-24

President of the University, 6

Prizes, 40-41,51-52

Program of instruction for the M.D. degree, 43; summary of curriculum, 44

Programs, postgraduate, 53-54

Programs, special: for the Ph.D.degree, 49, 50-51; in physical therapy and occupa- tional therapy, 50; in psychoanalytic

INDEX 159

medicine, 50; in nutrition, 50; in clinical

genetics, 50-51; in biophysics and

biophysical chemistry, 51 Promotions, grades and, 43-44 Psychiatric Institute, New York State, 21,

26 Psychiatry: teaching hospital, 22; courses,

46, 48; officers of instruction, 106-17 Psychoanalytic Training and Research,

Center for, special programs, 50 Public Health: School of, 20-21; courses,

46; officers of instruction, 117-25

Radiology: courses, 48; officers of instruc- tion, 126-29

Readmission, 43-44

Registration: dates, 3; 28; late, 30

Regulations, University, 28-29

Rehabilitation Medicine: course, 48; offi- cers of instruction, 129-32

Religious holidays and attendance, 29

Research: cancer, 21-22; in human repro- duction, 22-23; in nutrition, 22; 50; in clinical genetics, 51-52

Residence halls, 32-33

Roosevelt Hospital Division, 16,26

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division, 15, 25

St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center, 25- 26

Scholarships, 33-38

Sociomedical Sciences, officers of instruc- tion, 123-24

Specialization: programs for, 49-51; grad- uate, 53-54

Statement of nondiscriminatory policies,

19-20 Students: selection of 27-28; medical

service to, 30; financial aid, 33-41;

housing, 32-33; activities, 41-42 Students, roster of: internship placement.

Class of 1981, 141-44; Class of 1982,

144-47; Class of 1983, 147-50; Class

of 1984, 150-53; Class of 1985, 153-

56 Surgery: courses, 48; officers of instruction,

133-37

Teaching hospitals, 15-17, 23-26 Teaching staff of the departments: see

under names of departments Transcripts, 32 Tropical medicine: officers of instruction,

124 Tuition, 30; refund of, 31

University Rights, Reservation of, 20 University Senate delegates, 8 Urology: teaching hospital, 23; course, 48; officers of instruction, 138-40

Vice President for Health Sciences, 6 Visiting professorship, 51

Washington Heights Health and Teaching

Center, 21 William Black Medical Research Center,

21 Withdrawal and adjustment of fees, 31

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY The Morningside Campus & Environs

Manhattan School of Music

West 123rd Street

Jewish Thaologicsl Seminary

West 122nd Street

Riverside Church

Corpas Christi Church

&3nt Sarasota

Bancroft The Faiilioiiii

West 1 2 Isl Street

Interchurch Center

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620 616 Casa 600 Hispiiuca

W jodbridge ®^^ 617 r-v*iM

Pupin Pejram

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Seeley W Mudd Engineering Terrace

Mathematics Earl Leaistrim Dodge

Uris

Low

Memorial

Library

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C«nter

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», Avery ^ V Ext. ~

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Kent

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International Affairs

Casa Italiana

Campus

Info. » Visitor Se

College Walk

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Hamilton

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Har«ey

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Butler Library Carman John Jay

Har1<nessThestr«

CI

Law

"^S^ Facuny House

Johnson

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1121-25 Post Office

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HEALTH SCIENCES CAMPUS

Alumni Auditorium

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Dana W. Atchley

Pavilion

The Babies Hospital

Babies Hospital Research,

Teaching, and Office

Addition

Bard Hall Medical Student

Residence

Bard Haven Tow/ers

William Black Medical

Research Building

Cancer Center/Institute of

Cancer Research

Central Service Building

College of Physicians and

Surgeons

Center for Community

Health Systems

13

22

23

7 16 20

2/12

School of Dental and Oral

Surgery

Georgian Nurses

Residence

Edward S. Harkness Eye

Institute

Eye Institute Research

Laboratories

Harkness Memorial Hall

Harkness Pavilion

Pauline A. Hartford

Memorial Chapel

Julius and Armand

Hammer Health Sciences

Center

Institute of Human

Nutrition

International Institute for

the Study of Human

Reproduction

6 Anna C. Maxwell Hall, School of Nursing Residence

5 The Neurological Institute of New York

6 School of Nursing 25 Parking facilities

17 Presbyterian Hospital

New York Orthopedic

Hospital Sloane Hospital for

Women Squier Urological Clinic 4 New York State

Psychiatric Institute 4 Psychoanalytic Clinic 15 Schoolof Public Health 19 Radiotherapy Center

13 Vanderbilt Clinic

14 Vanderbilt Clinic Addition

The Faculty of Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS

Columbia University

Bulletin

Inquiries

POST OFFICE ADDRESS:

College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

TELEPHONE INQUIRIES:

Office of Admissions (Area code 212) 694-3596 Office of Financial Aid: (Area code 212) 694-4100

OTHER BULLETINS OF THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE:

Human Nutrition

Nursing (including the Graduate Programs: Adult/Child Acute Care, Adult Nurse Practitioner, Community Nursing, Gerontology, Maternity Nursing-Nurse-Midwifery, Nurse Anes- thesia, Pediatric Primary Care Nursing, Pediatric Pulmonary Nursing, Perinatal Nursing, Adult/Child Psychiatric -Community Mental Health Nursing

Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Continuing Education in the Health Sciences: Postgraduate Courses

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

Public Health

Photographs: pages 2 and 4 by Carlos Rene Perez; page 15 by Roy Morosch; pages 16, 42, 56, and 146 by Joel Freid; page 54 by Jack Vartoogian

The Faculty of Medicine College of Physicians & Surgeons

Columbia University Bulletin

1982-1983

r '

m

fs

Contents

Academic Calendar 5

Health Sciences Administration 8

Faculty of Medicine 8

College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals 17

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid 25

Application for Admission, 25. Registration, 26. Regulations, 26. Auditing Courses, 27. Fees, 27. Application for a Degree, 29. Requests for Transcripts, 30. Estimated Expenses, 30. Housing, 30. Financial Aid, 31. Student and Alumni Activities, 40.

Program of Instruction 43

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence, 43. Key to Course Numbers, 44. Summary of Curriculum, 44. Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses, 44. Major Clinical Year, 46. Fourth Year, 48. Special Programs, 49. Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship, 5L Prizes and Awards, 51.

Postgraduate Programs 55

Departments of Instruction 57

Anatomy and Cell Biology, 57. Anesthesiology, 58. Biochemistry, 61. Dermatology, 63. Human Genetics and Development, 65. Medicine, 66. Microbiology, 77. Neurological Surgery, 79. Neurology, 80. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 83. Ophthalmology, 88. Orthopedic Surgery, 90. Otolaryngology, 93. Pathology, 94. Pediatrics, 100. Pharmacology, 108. Physiology, 109. Psychiatry, 110. Public Health, 122. Radiology, 130. Rehabilitation Medicine, 134. Surgery, 137. Urology, 142.

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1982 147

Student Roster 150

Index 162

"■^4 ■' W.

Academic Calendar, 1982-1983

Major Religious Holidays

For a statement of University policy regarding religious holidays, see Admission, Registration, and Expenses Regulations.

The Jewish holy days shown below begin at sundown of the preceding day. Some of the major holidays occurring on weekdays are the following:

Thursday, July 22 Id al Fitr

Saturday, September 18 Rosh Hashanah

Monday, September 27 Id al Adha

Monday, September 27 Yom Kippur

Saturday, October 2 First days of Succoth

Saturday, October 9 Concluding days of Succoth

Tuesday, Wednesday, March 29, 30 First days of Passover

Monday, Tuesday, April 4, 5 Concluding days of Passover

Friday, April 1 Good Friday

Wednesday, Thursday, May 18, 19 Shavuoth

JUNE

7-18 Monday-Friday.' Registration for Class of 1984.

7 Monday. Academic year begins for Class of 1984.

8-9 Tuesday-Wednesday. NBME I, Class of 1984. Passing is required for graduation.

21-25 Monday-Friday.' Registration for Class of 1983.

28 Monday. Academic year begins for Class of 1983.

JULY

1 Thursday. Class of 1983 reports to hospital rotations.

5 Monday. Independence Day observed for third- and fourth-year students.

6 Tuesday. Class of 1984 reports to hospital rotations. AUGUST

2 Monday. t Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in October (see September 9).

23-27 Monday-Friday. Optional early registration for second-year students.

26-31 Thursday-Tuesday. Orientation for first-year students.

27 Friday.' Registration for first-year students.

30 Monday.' Registration for second-year students.

'Students allowed to register after the period specified must pay a late fee. "f Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

6 ACADEMIC CALENDAR

SEPTEMBER

1 Wednesday. Academic year begins for first- and second-year students; late registration begins.

6 Monday. Labor Day holiday for first-, second-, third-, and fourth-year students.

8-9 Wednesday-Thursday. National Board Part I Examination for students failing June 8-9 examination.

9 Thursday. Last day to file late applications for October degrees.

28-29 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Board Part II Examination for fourth-year students. Passing is required for graduation.

OCTOBER

27 Wednesday. Award of October degrees.

NOVEMBER

2 Tuesday. Election Day. Holiday for first- and second-year students.

5 Friday.' Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in January (see December 10).

25-26 Thursday-Friday. Thanksgiving holidays for first-, second-, and third-year students.

DECEMBER

10 Friday. Last day to file late applications for January degrees.

18 Saturday, through January 2, Sunday. Vacation for second- and third-year students.

21 Tuesday, through January 2, Sunday. Vacation for first-year students.

JANUARY

3 Monday. Resumption of classes for first-, second-, and third-year students. 12 Wednesday. First semester ends for first-year students.

17 Monday. Second semester begins for first-year students. 26 Wednesday. Award of January degrees. FEBRUARY

21 Monday. Washington's Birthday observed. Holiday for first- and second-year students.

22 Tuesday.' Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in May (see April 1).

MARCH

26 Saturday, through April 3, Sunday. Spring vacation for first- and second-year students.

'Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

ACADEMIC CALENDAR 7

APRIL

1 Friday. Last day to file late applications for May degrees.

6-7 Wednesday-Thursday. National Board Part II Examination for students 'Jailing September 28-29 examination.

MAY

4 Wednesday. Dean's Day for Medical Student Research.

17 Tuesday. Columbia University Commencement and Convocation (tentative) of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

30 Monday. Memorial Day. Holiday for first-, second-, and third-year students.

JUNE

4 Saturday, through June 13, Monday. Study period for second-year students NBME I.

10 Friday. Second semester ends for first-year students.

13-18 Monday-Saturday.' Registration for Class of 1985.

14 Tuesday. Academic year begins for Class of 1985.

14-15 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Board Part I Examination. Passing is required for graduation.

17 Friday. Major Clinical Year concludes for third-year students.

28-30 Tuesday-Thursday.' Registration for Class of 1984.

30 Thursday. Academic year begins for Class of 1984.

JULY

1 Friday. Electives begin for Class of 1984.

4 Monday. Independence Day. Holiday for third- and fourth-year students.

5 Tuesday. Class of 1985 reports to hospital rotations.

Dates of National Board Examinations

Part I September 8-9, 1982. Not given at P&S.

June 14-15, 1983. Required by P&S.

Part II September 28-29, 1982. Required by P&S. April 6-7, 1983. Not given at P&S.

'Students allowed to register after the period specified must pay a late fee.

Health Sciences Administration

MICHAEL I. SOVERN, LL.B., LL.D. President of the University

ROBERT F. GOLDBERGER, M.D. Provost of the University; Vice President for Health Sciences

FRITZ R. STERN, Ph.D. Provost of the University

KATHLEEN MULLINEX, Ph.D. Vice Provost of the University

PHILIP J. SHARKEY, Ph.D. Deputy Vice President for Health Sciences

CHERYL GILLEN RICE, M.P.A. Assistant Vice President for Health Sciences Administra- tion

The Faculty of Medicine

DONALD F. TAPLEY, M.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine

THOMAS Q. MORRIS, M.D. Vice Dean

BERNARD CHALLENOR, M.D. Associate Dean for Hospital Affairs

RAYMOND J. DEVLIN, B.B.A. Associate Dean for Administrative Affairs

LINDA D. LEWIS, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs

CHERYL GILLEN RICE, M.P.A. Associate Dean for Clinical Administration

DOROTHY ESTES, M.D. Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs

LESTER M. GELLER, M.D. Assistant Dean for Student and Curricular Affairs

KATHLEEN O'DONNELL, M.B.A., M.P.H. Assistant Dean for Administrative Affairs

JOANN S. JAMANN, Ed.D. Dean of the School of Nursing

ROBERT J . WEISS, M.D. Dean of the School of Public Health

MICHAEL O'CONNOR, M.P.A. Assistant Dean for Administration, School of Public Health

STEPHEN WOTMAN, D.D.S. Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs, School of Public Health

Executive Committee of the Faculty Council

Donald F. Tapiey {chairman) Glenda Garvey Donald Kornfeld

John Bilezikian Michael Gershon Lewis P. Rowland

A. Whitley Bran wood Harold Ginsberg Kevin Sanborn

Rose Ruth Ellison Douglas Ishii Henry Spotnitz Kenneth Forde

Faculty Council of the Faculty of Medicine

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 9

Maxwell Abramson Philip O. Alderson Dennis J. Allendorf George B. Ambrose Ronald Andree John L. Antunes Ernest April Robert B. Armstrong Kimball C. Atwood Stephen J. Atwood Howard Bailit David Baker Laxmi Baxi David Befeler Henrik Bendixen Robert G. Bertsch Aaron Bhattacharyya John P. Bilezikian Louis S. Blancato Martin Blank Andrew Blitzer A. Whitley Branwood Ronald Brisman Donald C. Brody Roger Burnett Charles J. Campbell Charles R. Cantor Elizabeth W. Carter Herbert Cave Solan Chao Leonard Chess John Colombotos Nicholas Cunningham Peter Danilo, Jr. Barbara J. Decker Ralph B. Dell Darryl C. deVivo Thomas F. Dillon Salvatore DiMauro John A. Downey Philip Duffy I. S. Edelman Nas S. Eftekhar Rose Ruth Ellison John J. Fenoglio Jorge Fischbarg Max Forbes Karen S. Fountain

Harold Fox Alexander Garcia Marguerite Gates Lester M. Geller Michael D. Gershon Elsa-Grace Giardina Harold S. Ginsberg Alexander H. Glassman Arnold P. Gold Rachel Goldstein Peter Gouras Carolyn P. Greenberg Ramareddy V. Guntaka Leonard C. Harber Constance J. Hayes Margaret Heagerty Brian Hoffmann Cheng Chun Huang Allen 1. Hyman Douglas Ishii Thomas P. Jacobs JoAnn Jamann William James, Jr. Ivo P. Janecka Karen Kaplan Michael Katz Donald W. King Thomas C. King Donald S. Kornfeld Alvin I. Krasna Dolores Kreisman Oscar Kruesi Conrad G. Lattes Marianne J. Legato Phyllis Leppert Linda D. Lewis Arnold Lisio Elizabeth Mahoney Sidney Malitz Eric Marcus Eric C. Martin Marie-France

Maylie-Pfenninger Christine Milcarek Dorothy Miller William Minogue Thomas Q. Morris

Jane H. Morse Stanley J. Myers Pearila Namerow William L. Nastuk Hugh Nellans Barbara Neuhaus Hymie L. Nossel Roman Nowygrod Carl A. Olsson Carmen Ortiz-Neu Nigel Paneth Timothy A. Pedley Richard N. Pierson Conrad Pirani Peter J. Puchner John D. Rainer Keith Reemstma Ronald O. Rieder Allan G. Rosenfield Lewis G. Rowland James H. Ryan Kevin Sanborn Saul Sanders Gloria 0. Schrager David Shaffer Patrick Shrout John Silver Saul Silverstein Michael I. Severn Henry Spotnitz Bennett Stein David Svahn John V. Taggart Donald F. Tapley Virginia Tennyson Herbert Thornhill Raymond L. Vande Wiele Fred Van Natta Bonnie Ann Wallace Sylvan Wallenstein Stephen Wang Michelle P. Warren Walter Wichern Robert J. Weiss Ralph deVere White Andrew L. Wit Stuart C. Yudofsky

10 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the Dean

Donald F. Tapley {chairman) Maxwell Abramson Charles A. Ashley Henrik Bendixen Donald A. Bradley Charles J. Campbell Robert E. Canfield Charles Cantor Bernard D. Challenor John A. Downey Isidore S. Edelman Dorothy Estes Jose Ferrer Allan Formicola Gary Gambuti

Alexander Garcia Lester Geller Michael Gershon Harold S. Ginsberg Rachel Goldstein Leonard Harber Brian F. Hoffman Frederick Hofmann JoAnn Jamann Eric Kandel Michael Katz Donald W. King Linda Lewis Sidney Malitz William F. Minogue

Thomas Q. Morris Edward S. Noroian Carl Olsson Keith Reemtsma Lewis P. Rowland Charles T. Ryder William B. Seaman Philip J. Sharkey Sol Spiegelman Bennett Stein Mervyn Susser Raymond L. Vande Wiele Stephen F. Wang Robert J. Weiss Myron Winick

Committees

ADMISSIONS: Professor Andrew Frantz {chairman): Professors April, Ballard, Bell, Blank, Braham, Branche, Donn, Downey, Dunton, Forde, Harvey, Housepian, Jagiello, Donald W. King, Nocenti, Oritz-Neu, Pierson, Schullinger, Schwartz, J. A. Stein, Stock, Weidel. Ex officio: Dean Tapley, Professors Linda Lewis and Schachter. Students: Louis Rice and Hal Wasser-

man.

CURRICULUM: Professor Mero Nocenti {chairman); Professors Abramson, Arkow, Atwood, Bertsch, Birkhoff, Branwood, Brust, Shu Chien, Despommier, Drusin, Eggers, C. Fenoglio, J. Fenoglio, Fine, Ghez, Brian Hoffman, Sidney Horowitz, Keim, Lorch, Eric Marcus, Stanley Meyers, Nunez, Ortiz-Neu, Petrie, Post, Eric Rose, Stephen Rosenberg, Kevin Sanborn, B. D. Srinivasan, P. R. Srinivasan. Ex officio: Flora Atkins, Rachael Goldstein, Professors Linda Lewis and Lester Geller. Students: Gene Coman and Neil Theise.

Delegates to the University Senate

Jennifer J. Bell, Leonard Brand, Margaret C. Heagarty, Donald W. King, Thomas C. King, Gerard Turino, Richard N. Pierson, Jr.; and Maureen Casey and Philip Wilner, student delegates.

Joint Administrative Board

REPRESENTING COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: Thomas L. Chrystie, Edward N. Costikyan, Thomas D. Flynn, Robert F. Goldberger, William W. Golub, David B. Hertz, William N. Hubbard, Jr., Joan Konner, and Michael I. Sovern

REPRESENTING PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL: John W. Brooks, Thomas H. Choate, Felix E. Demartini, George S. Dillon, Jon R. Katzenbach, Ralph F. Leach, Sidney J. Weinberg, Jr., and Myles V. Whalen, Jr.

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 11

Administrative Staff

TERI VAN TATENHOVE. Executive Assistant to the Vice President for Health Sciences

MARY J. SULLIVAN. Assistant to the Dean

JOHN L. BENSON. Business Officer

SHEILA BRENNER . Financial Aid Officer

JOAN BENNIS. Director of the Office of Admissions

ADELAIDE ROTHE. Coordinator of Academic Appointments

GEORGE SUSKO. Associate Registrar

Officers Emeriti

HENRY ARANOW, JR. Lambert Professor Emeritus of Medicine

DANA W. ATCHLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

HAROLD BARKER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

VIOLA BERNARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

STANLEY BRADLEY. Bard Professor Emeritus of Medicine

HAROLD W. BROWN. Professor Emeritus of Parasitology

GORDON M . BRUCE . Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

LESTER C AHN . Professor Emeritus of Oral Pathology

MARY E. CALLAHAN. Professor Emeritus of Physical Therapy

ARTHUR C ARR . Professor Emeritus of Medical Psychology

ROBERT CARROLL. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

SIDNEY CARTER. Professor Emeritus of Neurology

ERWIN CH ARGAFF. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

JOHN J. CONLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology

WILFRED M. COPENHAVER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

STUART COSGRIFF. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

ANDRE F. COURN AND. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

DAVID COWEN. Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

GEORGE F. CRIKELAIR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

EDWARD C. CURNEN, JR. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

ROBERT C. DARLING. Simon Baruch Professor Emeritus of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

ELIZABETH B. DAVIS. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry

12 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

ROBERT M . D A Y . Clinical Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

D. ANTHONY D'ESOPO. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

A. GERARD DeVOE. Harkness Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

Z ACHARI AS DISCHE. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

HERBERT O. ELFTMAN. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

CARL FEIND. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

JOSE M. FERRER, JR. Professor Emeritus of Surgery

M. IRENE FERRER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

JOHN W. FERTIG. Professor Emeritus of Biostatistics

THOMAS D. FLEMING. Professor Emeritus of Library Science

CHARLES A . FLOOD. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

GOODWIN L . FOSTER . Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

CHARLES L. FOX, JR. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology (in Surgery)

MARIE-LOUISE FRANCISCUS. Professor Emeritus of Occupational Therapy

ELIZABETH S. GILL. Professor Emeritus of Nursing

WILLIAM GOLDFARB. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

LEONARD J . GOLDWATER. Professor Emeritus of Occupational Medicine

HARRY GRUNDFEST. Professor Emeritus of Neurology

RUTH J. GUTTMANN. Professor Emeritus of Radiology

CUSHMAN D. HAAGENSEN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

MICHAEL HEIDELBERGER. Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry

GEORGE H. HUMPHREYS II. Mott Professor Emeritus of Surgery

HAROLD W . J ACOX . Professor Emeritus of Radiology

IRA S. JONES. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

ERICH J. KAHN. Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

MAXWELL KARSHAN. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

AARON KARUSH. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry

FORREST E. KENDALL. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

PHILIP KN APP. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

LAWRENCE C. KOLB. Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

RAPHAEL LATTES. Professor Emeritus of Surgical Pathology

JOHN K. LATTIMER. Professor Emeritus of Urology

FERDINAND F. McALLISTER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 13

RUSTIN McINTOSH. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

RICHARD L. MASLAND. H. Houston Merritt Professor Emeritus of Neurology

AUBRE MAYN ARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Surgery

MEYER M. MELICOW. John L. Given Professor Emeritus of Urology

GEORGE R. MERRIAM, JR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

FREDERICK A. METTLER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

KARL MEYER. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LESTER A. MOUNT. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurological Surgery

MARGARET R. MURRAY. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

DAVID NACHMANSOHN. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

HELEN P. PETTIT. Professor Emeritus of Nursing

KERMIT PINES. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Medicine

J. LAWRENCE POOL. Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery

EDITH H. QUIMBY. Professor Emeritus of Radiology (Physics)

HERBERT RACKOW. Professor Emeritus of Anesthesiology

HARRY M. ROSE. Borne Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

THOMAS V. SANTULLI. Professor Emeritus of Surgery

EDWARD B. SCHLESINGER. Byron Stookey Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery

WILLIAM B. SEAMAN. Picker Professor Emeritus of Radiology

WILLIAM H. SEBRELL, JR. Williams Professor Emeritus of Nutrition

BEATRICE C. SEEGAL. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

L A WRENCE W . SLOAN . Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

ALAN DeP. SMITH. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

HAMILTON SOUTHWORTH. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

WARREN M. SPERRY. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

DAVID SPRINSON . Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LEO SROLE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Social Sciences in Psychiatry

HERBERT C. STOERK. Professor Emeritus of Pathology

PRANK E. STINCHPIELD. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

JOHN V. T AGGART. Dalton Professor Emeritus of Physiology

HOWARD C. TAYLOR, JR. Rappleye Professor Emeritus of Obstetrics and Gynecology

JUERGEN TONDORPP. Professor Emeritus of Otolaryngology

PRANK W. VAN DYKE. Professor Emeritus of Public Health (Administrative Medicine)

CARMEN T. VICALE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurology

14 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

JULES G. WALTNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology

SHIH-CHUN WANG. Gustavus A. Pfeiffer Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology

SIDNEY C. WERNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

ARTHUR B. WERTHEIM. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

SAMUEL M. WISHIK. Professor Emeritus of Public Health (Public Health Practice)

ABNER WOLF. Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

JAMES WOLFF. Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

JOSEPH ZUBIN. Professor Emeritus of Psychology

j!V"

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is guided by the principle that medical education is university education. The acquisition of knowledge and skills is important in professional education, but far more vital is a profound understanding of the science, the art, and the ethic within which both knowledge and skill are applied. As a part of Columbia University, the College builds its curriculum, selects its officers of instruction, and marshals its enormous resources of equipment and clinical experience to develop in the student this understanding of medicine. Within the curriculum for the M.D. degree is the fundamental knowledge upon which later specialization is built, and from which the natural bent is discovered toward general or special practice, or toward research, teaching, or administration. The postgraduate programs of the College provide training in the specialties, help the graduate physician to keep abreast of new knowledge, and support the research from which the physician's knowledge develops.

Statement of Nondiscriminatory Policies

The University is required by certain Federal statutes and administrative regulations to publish the following statements:

Consistent with the requirements of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, as amended, and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R., the University does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the conduct or operation of its education programs or activities (including employment therein and admission thereto). Inquiries concerning the application of Title IX and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R. may be referred to Ms. Rosalind S. Fink, the Director of the University's Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action (305 Low Memorial Library, New York, N.Y. 10027, telephone 212-280-5511), or to the Director, Office for Civil Rights (Region II), 26 Federal Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10007.

Columbia University admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the University. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other University-administered programs.

Consistent with the requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and Part 84 of 45 C.F.R. , the University does not discriminate on the basis of handicap in admission or access to, or employment in, its programs and activities. Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified handicapped workers.

The University in addition desires to call attention to other laws and regulations that protect employees, students, and applicants.

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin in programs or activities receiving Federal financial assistance. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits employment discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. Executive Order 11246, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin and requires affirmative action to ensure equality of opportunity in all aspects of employ- ment.

The Equal Pay Act of 1963 prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in rates of pay. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of age.

The Columbia University Senate on December 1, 1978, passed a resolution announcing its general educational policy on discrimination which reaffirms the University's commitment to nondiscriminatory policies in the above-mentioned categories, as well as its policy not to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.

18 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

Section 402 of the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended, prohibits job discrimination and requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified special disabled veterans and veterans of the Vietnam era.

All employees, students, and applicants are protected from coercion, intimidation, interfer- ence or discrimination for filing a complaint or assisting in an investigation under any of the foregoing policies and laws.

The University's Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action has also been designated to coordinate the University's compliance activities under each of the programs referred to above. Any employee who believes that he or she has been denied equal opportunity should contact this Office, which will investigate complaints and counsel employees on questions relating to equal opportunity and affirmative action.

Reservation of University Rights

This bulletin is intended for the guidance of persons applying for or considering application for admission to Columbia University and for the guidance of Columbia students and faculty. The bulletin sets forth in general the manner in which the University intends to proceed with respect to the matters set forth herein, but the University reserves the right to depart without notice from the terms of this bulletin. This bulletin is not intended to be and should not be regarded as a contract between the University and any student or other person.

History of the College and University

Columbia University began as King's College, which was founded in 1754 by royal grant of George 11, King of England, "for the Instruction of Youth in the Learned Languages, and the Liberal Arts and Sciences." The American Revolution interrupted its program, but in 1784 it was reopened as Columbia College. In 1912 the title was changed to Columbia University in the City of New York.

King's College organized a medical faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the North American Colonies to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine. The first graduates in medicine from the College were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam, who received the degree of Bachelor of Medicine in May 1769, and that of Doctor of Medicine in May 1770 and May 1771, respectively. Instruction in medicine was given until interrupted by the Revolution and the occupation of New York by the British, which lasted until November 25, 1783. In 1784 instruction was resumed in the academic departments, and in December of the same year the medical faculty was reestablished. In 1814 the medical faculty of Columbia College was merged with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, which had obtained an independent charter in 1807. In 1860, by agreement between the Trustees of the two institutions, the College of Physicians and Surgeons became the Medical Department of Columbia College; from that time on the diplomas of the graduates were signed by the President of Columbia College as well as by the President of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The connection was only a nominal one, however, until 1891, when the college was incorporated as an integral part of the University. Since September 1917, women have been admitted to the College on the same basis as men.

The Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center was opened in the spring of 1928, seven years after the establishment of a permanent alliance between Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital. It consists of the following units: the divisions of the University Faculty of Medicine (the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the School of Nursing, the School of Public Health); the University School of Dental and Oral Surgery; the Presbyterian Hospital and its subdivisions; the New York State Psychiatric Institute; and the Washington Heights Health and Teaching Center.

The Medical Center occupies a plot of land given to Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital by Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness and Mr. Edward S. Harkness. It comprises

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 19

about twenty acres extending from West 165th Street to West 168th Street and from Broadway to Riverside Drive and is readily accessible from all parts of the city. A map of the Medical Center is given on the inside back cover.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is at 630 West 168th Street between Broadway and Fort Washington Avenue in a seventeen-story building, each floor of which connects with the wards and services of the Presbyterian Hospital. The William Black Medical Research Building is a twenty-story building, containing research laboratories for the faculty members of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. It is connected with the College building and is located at 168th Street and Fort Washington Avenue. The Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, a twenty-story structure diagonally opposite the William Black Medical Research Building, opened its teaching, research, and library facilities in 1976.

Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library

The Columbia University Health Sciences Library is housed in the Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, 701 West 168th Street. The four floors occupied by the library offer a comfortable atmosphere conducive to study, including such amenities as individual study carrels, group study and conference rooms, typing rooms, and a leisure reading lounge.

With more than 370,000 volumes and a staff of 42, the Health Sciences Library is one of the largest medical center libraries in the United States. It is well able to serve the needs of faculty, students, and researchers in the health sciences disciplines. More than 3,100 periodicals are received regularly. The library includes a comprehensive media center equipped with audiovisual materials and equipment, as well as a significant rare book and special collections section. In addition to traditional reference services, the library offers computerized literature searching on several data bases, including MEDLARS. Materials describing library services are available on request.

Other Columbia libraries, located on the Morningside campus, are open to all students and faculty who carry Columbia identification cards. The main collection is housed in Butler Library; special and departmental collections are housed in other buildings on the campus. Columbia students and faculty are also permitted access to the collections of approximately twenty other research institutions including Stanford and Yale Universities, under the auspices of the Research Libraries Group. Information about the Research Libraries Group can be obtained from the Health Sciences Library.

Comprehensive Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research

The Cancer Research Center was established in 1973. In 1977 it was designated the Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research. In 1979 the Center was awarded Comprehensive status by the National Cancer Institute in recognition of its broad responsibility for research, patient care, and cancer control activities. The Center coordinates, integrates, and facilitates cancer research, education, and patient care in the Health Sciences Faculties of Columbia University and its affiliated hospitals in New York City Presbyterian, St. Luke's, Roosevelt, Harlem as well as Overlook in Summit, New Jersey, and Morristown Memorial Hospital in New Jersey. The Cancer Center was organized to effect the efficient and cooperative use of all Center resources, maximize the dissemination of information among Center personnel, and facilitate the rapid translation of cancer research findings into programs for improving capabilities for the prevention of cancer and the care of patients with cancer.

The Institute of Cancer Research of Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, was established in 1911 with funds bequeathed to the University by George Crocker. It moved from its original quarters on 116th Street to the campus of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in 1938.

The Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Institute of Cancer Research were separated in 1980 to function as two separate entities. While both are mutually involved in a clinical and basic research cancer effort, their administrations function autonomously.

20 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

The Centers for Community Health

The Centers for Community Health are composed of a Center for Health Services Research and a Collaborative Program in Oral Health with the School of Dental and Oral Surgery whose research program is one of the few in the country directed toward an area of health services which has long been neglected. The Centers provide a locus for student teaching and research by the Faculty of Medicine and the School of Public Health, especially health administration, on problems of the delivery, financing, and distribution of health care in a diverse group of institutions in the inner city and the suburbs.

Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology

The Center was established and funded by the Faculty of Medicine and the New York State Office of Mental Health and is a rich resource for teaching and research in geriatrics and gerontology in a group of medical as well as long-term care facilities. The Center recently has been designated by the Administration on Aging as a long-term care gerontology center. With major funding from the Administration, it is one of the five operational programs on long-term care and intends to forge an alliance between the University and the community providers of care for the development of services to the elderly. Its major focus is research and the evaluation of programs for the care of the elderly.

Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center

The Sergievsky Center is a center for research in the epidemiology of epilepsy, cerebral palsy, and developmental brain disorders. The center has a core scientific faculty concerned with the development of research in the epidemiology of those diseases. Funded with an endowment, it participates in the teaching programs of the Epidemiology Division of the School of Public Health and provides a major resource in epidemiology research and training in neuroepidemi- ology.

Institute of Human Nutrition

The Institute of Human Nutrition is an interdisciplinary unit whose mission is to study all aspects of nutrition that relate to human health. The Institute is organized into three primary divisions: Growth and Development, Nutrition and Metabolism, and Community Nutrition. Although each division conducts its own research program and offers its own program of instruction, these are highly integrated in order to achieve two basic goals: research in all areas of human nutrition and an integrated teaching program in areas of nutrition relevant to the physician and medical scientist.

To achieve this integration of purpose and at the same time allow for the specialization necessary for the best research and teaching, combined research projects between the divisions are under way, and joint seminars and courses involving faculty and students in all three divisions are conducted. Constant interchange of ideas is fostered through weekly combined staff conferences and special lectures which are open to the medical center community. Through its Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy, and postdoctoral programs, the Institute aims to train individuals for scholarly activities in university and research centers that are in the forefront of the movement to advance nutrition as a health science.

The facilities of the Institute include laboratories in the William Black Medical Research Center, and the Obesity Center and Nutrition and Metabolic Research Center at St. Luke's Hospital Center. The office of the Director and other administrative offices are located on the seventh floor of the Health Sciences Center.

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 21

International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction

The International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction was founded in 1965 by Dr. Howard C. Taylor and was made possible by a substantial grant from the Ford Foundation. The primary purpose of the founders was to foster research in the sciences relevant to the solution of the world population problem. In more recent years, the aims of the Institute have been interpreted more broadly to include reproductive health services for women, international research and technical assistance, social science research, and academic programs. The Institute now consists of three centers.

The Center for Reproductive Sciences is composed of an interdisciplinary group of investigators devoting themselves to the study of the biochemical and physiological aspects of reproduction in men and women. It also comprises a clinical division involved in the diagnosis and treatment of the diseases of female reproduction.

The aims of the Center for Population and Family Health are more specifically relevant to the social consequences of human reproduction. The Center's community-oriented Reproduc- tive Health Services for Women Unit, in cooperation with the division of ambulatory care of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, provides care, with emphasis on services for adolescents, to the community surrounding the Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. The Center's International Research and Technical Assistance Unit works with a number of foreign governments and with private organizations toward improved basic health and family planning services for poor people in developing countries. The Social Sciences Research Unit conducts ongoing evaluations of the Center's domestic reproductive service programs and carries out a basic research program on the causes and consequences of adolescent fertility. Finally, as a division of the School of Public Health, the Center provides academic programs leading to the M.P.H. and Dr.P.H. degrees in the fields of population/family planning, maternal and child health, and public health nutrition.

A third unit has recently been added to the Institute: the Center for Male Reproduction. The Center consists of an interdisciplinary group of basic scientists and clinicians engaged in the study and treatment of the diseases of the male reproductive system.

The offices of the Centers for Reproductive Sciences and for Male Reproduction are at 630 West 168th Street and the office for the Center for Population and Family Health is at 60 Haven Avenue, Floor B-3, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Affiliated Hospitals

The Presbyterian Hospital in the City of New York

Founded in 1868, the Hospital joined with the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons to form the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, which opened in 1928. Under the terms of the permanent alliance agreement with Columbia University, members of the hospital staff are appointed by the Board of Trustees of the hospital on nomination by the Trustees of the University. The Presbyterian Hospital has an overall capacity of 1,291 beds and 48 bassinets. Plans call for a major modernization effort to begin in 1983.

The Hospital includes all of the individual units described below:

Presbyterian Hospital \s the single largest hospital pavilion.

The New York Orthopaedic Hospital opened as a dispensary in 1866 largely because of the interest taken in the care of the crippled by Theodore Roosevelt, father of the president of the same name. The hospital was located in its own buildings at 420 East 59th Street until December 1950, when it was merged with the Presbyterian Hospital as its orthopedic service.

Squier Urological Clinic is the Urology Service of the Presbyterian Hospital.

22 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

Shane Hospital for Women, currently the Hospital's obstetrics and gynecology unit, was built at West 59th Street and Amsterdam Avenue and presented to Columbia University by Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sloane in 1886. It now is part of the Presbyterian Hospital's new Center for Women and Children.

Harkness Pavilion, erected when the Medical Center was established in 1928, is available for the accommodation of private and semiprivate patients from various services.

Babies Hospital, founded in 1887, provides for general medical and surgical care of infants and children up to their late teens, and care for premature babies. It is now part of the Center for Women and Children.

Neurological Institute, one of the first nongovernmental hospitals in the country for the treatment of diseases of the nervous system, was founded in 1909. It moved from East 67th Street to the Medical Center in 1929. The Institute includes facilities added in 1960 for psychiatric patients. It comprises the Hospital's Neurology and Neurological Surgery Services.

The Edward S. Harkness Eye Institute, site of the Hospital's Ophthalmology Service, opened in 1933. It has complete facilities for the medical and surgical treatment of adults and children with diseases of the eye. On January 1, 1940, the work of the Herman Knapp Memorial Eye Hospital was taken over by the Institute.

Vanderbilt Clinic was presented to Columbia University by the Vanderbilt family in 1888 and is the outpatient department for the Presbyterian Hospital.

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital in Cooperstown, New York, is a rural hospital combining the characteristics of a university medical center with a dedication to the delivery of both primary health services to the local community and highly specialized services to a large referral area. The hospital has 180 beds and a staff of specialists who are all salaried and full time. In 1981 there were 130,000 visits to the Outpatient Department and 6,100 admissions. The teaching program for house staff and students is a highly personalized one based on a team approach to medical care. Members of the staff conduct biomedical research and are interested in models for the delivery of health care to the community. The library is unusually extensive for a hospital of this size, with over 22,000 volumes and about 600 subscribed journals. Since 1947 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia, and currently about 60 students from Columbia elect programs at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital.

Harlem Hospital Center

Harlem Hospital Center, founded in 1887, is a general hospital of nearly 1,100 beds serving Central Harlem and environs, responsible for the care of approximately 400,000 people. The College of Physicians and Surgeons, through a contractual arrangement with the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, is responsible for all professional services in this hospital and nominates its entire professional staff.

This affiliation presents a unique opportunity for teaching students, interns, and residents in the traditional disciplines of medicine and provides increasing opportunities for involvement in community medicine.

The Helen Hayes Hospital

The Helen Hayes Hospital at West Haverstraw, New York, founded in 1900, is an independent rehabilitation hospital with complete medical services, owned and operated by the

AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 23

state through the New York State Health Department. Since 1966 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia University. The medical specialties and allied health profes- sionals are organized into disability units that provide comprehensive care through an integrated team approach, providing unique educational opportunities for residents and allied health students. The hospital has 800 admissions and 6,000 outpatient visits a year. In 1980 a new 213-bed hospital building was opened, renovation of existing research facilities was completed, work began on construction of new research quarters, and plans were completed for establishment of several major new research centers. The Hospital's long-standing program of bioengineering research now becomes the Orthopedic Engineering and Research Center; to this will be added the Regional Bone Center, Regional Arthritis Center, and Skeletal Pathology Center.

Morristown Memorial Hospital

Morristown Memorial Hospital is a regional hospital center offering comprehensive health services for the entire family. It is a voluntary, nonprofit institution with a history of community service dating back to 1892. The hospital has become a central health care facility serving Morris, Warren, Sussex, and Somerset counties, and a medical referral center for all of northwest New Jersey. Morristown Memorial is also a teaching hospital, with programs for medical, nursing, and technical staff. It became affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1979. Morristown Memorial, Overlook Hospital in Summit, and St. Barnabas Hospital in Livingston are members of the Shared Services Consortium pioneering regionalized health care services in northern New Jersey. With 669 beds, 1,800 employees, 550 nurses, a medical and dental staff of more than 450, and a full spectrum of basic and highly specialized services, Morristown Memorial combines the traditional advantages of a community hospital with the advanced capabilities of a progressive medical center. The hospital has two divisions: one where the emphasis is on acute care; the other, a center for preadmission testing, geriatric extended care, outpatient and alcoholic services, and planned facilities for subacute and rehabilitative care.

Overlook Hospital

Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey, is a 540-bed suburban community hospital, founded in 1906, which became a teaching affiliate of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1975. h is a general, voluntary, nonprofit institution accommodating 20,000 inpatients and 100,000 outpatients each year. Overlook offers particularly strong training in family practice and primary care internal medicine and pediatrics through a program of broad-based clinical experience for graduate physicians. Outreach programs have been pioneered in alcoholism and other addictive illness, home-care-based hospice, and mobile intensive care utilizing paramedics. The newly opened Center for Community Health provides outpatient services including preadmission testing, ambulatory surgery and radiology, and a consumer health library. In 1982 the hospital received state approval for the addition of 84 new beds.

St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

St. Luke's Hospital Center, which has included Woman's Hospital since 1953, merged with The Roosevelt Hospital in 1979, forming a Hospital Center containing 1,363 beds and serving a catchment area spanning Manhattan's west side from 34th to 134th Streets. Both hospitals had maintained teaching affiliations with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University for many years before 1971, when they each became full University hospitals. Under the terms of the affiliation with Columbia University, new members of the medical staff are appointed by the Hospital Center's Board of Trustees after they have received appointments as officers of instruction at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

24 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division

St. Luke's was established in 1850 and has been on Morningside Heights next to the main Columbia campus since 1896. It merged with Woman's Hospital in 1953, and today the hospital complex contains 780 beds, including 45 pediatric beds, 59 obstetric beds, and 50 bassinets. Approximately 24,000 patients are admitted yearly to the four major and eleven specialty services. The attending staff numbers 600 doctors; the house staff consists of 219 residents and fellows.

St. Luke's is recognized as a leader in such fields as heart surgery, kidney transplantation, artificial kidney treatments, and noninvasive diagnosis (ultrasound). The Hospital Center's clinically oriented research projects are involved in such areas as blood diseases, coronary artery disease, gastroenterology, obesity and nutrition (it is the site of the only federally funded obesity research center), pulmonary disease, renal transplant-immunology, and bioengineering. A medical library of 22,000 volumes is an integral part of the Hospital Center. St. Luke's is both a major referral institution and a community hospital. The more than fifty specialty and subspecialty clinics see 50,000 patients yearly (totaling approximately 200,000 visits); the Emergency Room is one of the busiest in Manhattan, with 76,000 visits annually. The Hospital Center also operates extensive community programs in alcoholism treatment, drug detoxifica- tion, and mental health.

Roosevelt Hospital Division

The Roosevelt Hospital treated its first patient in 1871. It contains 583 beds and bassinets. There are about 217,000 outpatient and emergency-room visits annually. Approximately 19,000 patients are admitted to this hospital yearly. The hospital is engaged in many research and teaching activities. There are 159 members on the house staff. A new research building containing 52,000 square feet of laboratory space for all departments was opened in 1973. The medical library contains 17,000 volumes and subscribes to 550 medical and technical journals. The hospital is actively engaged in community programs, as represented by its Children and Youth Program and by its Drug Addiction and Alcoholism Programs and many other outreach and community services sponsored by the Departments of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, and Medicine, and the ambulatory care division.

New York State Psychiatric Institute

The Institute was built and is maintained by the New York State Office of Mental Health. Through a contractual arrangement, it is affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The Institute's functions are to provide the highest quality of clinical care for patients with psychiatric disorders, to provide education for mental health professionals, and to do research into the causes and treatment of psychiatric illness. The Institute currently maintains sixteen major research laboratories, a hospital, and a wide variety of specialized outpatient depart- ments which provide diagnostic and treatment programs. The Lawrence C. Kolb Research Annex, a thirteen-story facility dedicated to psychiatric research, was opened in the spring of 1982.

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid

Entering classes are enrolled in the College in September of each year. The minimum requirement for admission is attendance for three full academic years at an approved college of arts and sciences. Most applicants present four academic years and a bachelor's degree, although these are not required. The composition of our entering classes indicates, however, that only a relatively small number of three-year students have been accepted in the past by our Committee on Admissions.

The college program must have included English, physics, biology, organic chemistry (including at least one semester of laboratory), and some other course in chemistry covering at least one academic year. These requirements have been designated as mandatory not only by our faculty but by various state medical licensure boards as well; accordingly, applicants cannot be excused from them. Courses in genetics and embryology will be useful but are not required. Students applying for admission must also have taken the Medical College Admission Test in the spring or autumn of the year of application, but only if the test scores will be sent to medical schools in the State of New York; if the scores will not be sent to this school, the requirement will be waived for all applicants. The student may have concentrated in any area in the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, or arts but evidence of a balanced education, as well as demonstrated interest and ability in the natural sciences, is preferred.

Application Procedure

Application for admission must be filed on a special form obtained from the Admissions Office of the Faculty of Medicine. Applications should be submitted as promptly as possible, though they are accepted only for the next incoming class; requests for application forms may be submitted one year in advance of registration. The completed form must be accompanied by the application fee of $40. The fee helps to cover the cost of processing the application; it is therefore not returnable and is not credited toward tuition.

Applicants will be notified when their applications have been received. The Committee on Admissions, however, evaluates only completed applications, that is, those for which letters of recommendation have been received, along with MCAT scores and transcripts. Applicants will be notified, also, when their applications have been completed; if such notification is not received within sixty days after the date of the preliminary processing of an application, applicants should make inquiries at the Admissions Office to learn which items have not yet been received. Failure to receive letters of recommendation and transcripts is the most common cause of delay in the completion of applications.

If a personal interview is required in connection with the application, it will be requested only by the Admissions Office.

Selection of Students

The Committee on Admissions devotes months to the task of selecting a class of 148 from a very large number of applicants. Obviously there will be many well-qualified students whom the College will not be able to accept. The Faculty of Medicine recognizes its obligations in the field of medical education and research not only to the local area but to the nation as well. Admission will not be offered to any applicant who has not been interviewed by one of the College's representatives. Impressions from such an interview, as well as scores on the MCAT and academic records, will be considered in selecting individuals for admission. Other selection criteria are listed below.

The Committee places great importance on the fact that the students have learned to think for themselves, to explore, to work hard under their own initiative, to consider alternatives and

26 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

make decisions, and to develop a desire for a continuous program of self -education. In the selection of students, preference is given to those who, in the opinion of the Committee on Admissions, have shown high achievement in their college education, a mature sense of values, sound motivation, qualities of leadership, and ability to assume responsibility, and to those who have already given evidence that they are qualified to complete all requirements of our curriculum and to graduate as ethical, compassionate, and competent physicians.

The practice of medicine is both a science and an art and, to treat the patient as a whole person, the doctor must be a whole person. Students planning a career in medicine should be motivated toward becoming leaders in medical thinking, rather than technicians, because medical practice is both a private enterprise and a public responsibility. The liberal arts college offers the opportunity to prepare for a happier and more useful life of citizenship. Years of specialization lie ahead in a professional career, but the foundation of all advanced study is a broad liberal education, of which science is a part.

Admission to Advanced Standing

Only a very small number of vacancies occur during the medical course, and students can be accepted on transfer from other schools only when such vacancies do arise. Any student desiring to transfer from an accredited school of medicine to the upper classes of the College should communicate with the Admissions Office to learn if a vacancy exists.

Admission of Foreign Students

Applicants need not be citizens of this country but preferably should have received their premedical education at an accredited college or university in the United States or Canada. Applications may be submitted by individuals who have been educated elsewhere, but in the past the Committee on Admissions has had great difficulty in finding a satisfactory means of evaluating the caliber of education available in the many colleges and universities throughout the world. Likewise, the Committee will accept applications for admission with advanced standing to this school from individuals who have begun their medical education in schools outside the United States and Canada, but again it has usually been able to admit relatively few individuals, either to an entering class or with advanced standing, whose previous education has not been obtained in this country or Canada.

Registration

Before attending classes, each student must register in person at the Office of the Registrar during the registration period listed in the Academic Calendar. The Office of the Registrar, on the first floor of the Black Building, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.

All students will be asked to give Social Security numbers when registering in the University. Any who do not now have a number should obtain one from their local Social Security office well in advance of registration.

Regulations

According to University regulations, each person whose registration has been completed will be considered a student of the University during the term for which he or she is registered unless the student's connection with the University is officially severed by withdrawal or otherwise. No student registered in any school or college of the University shall at the same time be registered in any other school or college, either of Columbia University or of any other institution, without the specific authorization of the dean or director of the school or college of the University in which he or she is first registered.

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 27

The privileges of the University are not available to any student until he or she has completed registration. A student who is not officially registered for a University course may not attend the course unless granted auditing privileges (see below). No student may register after the stated period without the written consent of the appropriate dean or director.

The University reserves the right to withhold the privilege of registration or any other University privilege from any person with unpaid indebtedness to the University.

Conduct

All members of the University community, its visitors and guests, are governed by the Rules of University Conduct, which apply to all demonstrations, including rallies and picketing, that take place on or at a University facility. It is the student's responsibility to be aware of all provisions, regulations, and procedures contained in the Rules. Copies are available in the Office of the University Senate, 406 Low Memorial Library.

Attendance

Students are held accountable for absences incurred owing to late enrollment.

Religious Holidays

It is the policy of the University to respect its members' observance of their major religious holidays. Officers of administration and of instruction responsible for the scheduling of required academic activities or essential services are expected to avoid conflict with such holidays as much as possible. Such activities include examinations, registration, and various deadlines that are a part of the academic calendar. (See the Academic Calendar for dates of religious holidays.)

Where scheduling conflicts prove unavoidable, no student will be penalized for absence for religious reasons, and alternative means will be sought for satisfying the academic require- ments involved. If a suitable arrangement cannot be worked out between the student and the instructor involved, students and instructors should consult the appropriate dean or director. If an additional appeal is needed, it may be taken to the Provost.

Auditing Courses

Degree candidates in good standing who are enrolled for a full-time program in the current term may audit one or two courses (except during the summer term) in any division of the University without charge by filing a formal application in the Registrar's Office (Black Building, Room 138) no later than September 10 in the autumn term and January 28 in the spring term. Applications require (a) the certification of the Registrar that the student is eligible to audit and (b) the approval of the dean of the school in which the courses are offered.

For obvious reasons, elementary language courses, studio courses, applied music courses, laboratory courses, and seminars are not open to auditors; other courses may be closed because of space limitations. In no case will an audited course appear on a student's record, nor is it possible to turn an audited course into a credit course by paying the fee after the fact. Courses previously taken for credit may not be audited.

Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute for medical students, are subject to change at any time at the discretion of the Trustees.

Beginning with the academic year 1979-1980, University charges such as tuition and fees, residence halls, and board plans may be paid at the student's convenience during the term. The

28 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

full amount of any charge may be paid when due without penalty, or payment may be made in installments. If partial payments are made, a finance charge of 1.5 percent a month is assessed on amounts not paid by the due date shown on the monthly bill. In either event, however, the student is required to sign a Retail Installment Credit Agreement at the time of registration which sets forth the full terms and conditions of payment. All charges must be paid by the end of the term.

Tuition, the student health service fee, and the health insurance premium are payable as part of registration. (If the student chooses to pay tuition in two installments, one half of the tuition is payable at registration in September and the other half is payable in January.) If these fees are paid after the last day of registration (see the Academic Calendar), they will not be reduced, and a minimum late fee of $50 will be imposed. Checks for tuition and fees should be made payable to Columbia University.

Tuition

For the full course in medicine for one academic year (or the equivalent), payable in two installments $9,990.00

Health Service and Hospital Insurance Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute, are subject to change at the discretion of the Trustees. For all full-time students, per year (September 1 -August 31)

Health service fee $270.00

Hospital insurance premium 188.00

The student health service fee contributes to the cost of operating the Student Health Service. The hospital insurance fee pays the annual premium to the Associated Hospital Service of New York. Participation in these programs is compulsory for all full-time students; students who already carry hospital insurance, however, will be charged the health service fee only. Proof of comparable coverage must be shown at the time of registration. Upon payment of additional fees, students can acquire hospital insurance coverage for their dependents and the latter are eligible to receive the benefits of the health service program. Students should consult the Office of the Registrar, Black Building, Room 138, for further information on dependent coverage.

The Student Health Service, which holds daily office hours, is on the street level of Bard Haven Tower 1 (60 Haven Avenue).

Application Fees

For admission $40.00

For late application, or late renewal of application, for a degree 50.00

Late Registration Fees

Full-Time Part-Time

During late registration $ 50.00 $50.00

Up to four weeks after late registration 100.00 60.00

Four to eight weeks after late registration 150.00 70.00

Eight to twelve weeks after late registration 200.00 80.00

Beyond twelve weeks after late registration 250.00 90.00

ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID 29

Withdrawal and Adjustment of Fees

A student in good academic standing who is not subject to discipline will always be given an honorable dismissal if he or she wishes to withdraw from the University. Withdrawal is defined as the dropping of one's entire program in a given semester as opposed to dropping a portion of one's program.

Any student withdrawing must notify the Registrar in writing: failure to attend classes or notification of instructors does not constitute formal withdrawal and will result in failing grades in all courses. Any adjustment of the tuition that the student has paid is reckoned from the date on which the Registrar receives the student's written notification. Application fees, late fees, and special fees are not refundable.

Up to and including the second Saturday after the first day of classes, tuition will be retained in the following amount:

Full-time study Part-time study

$75.00 40.00

After the second Saturday after the first day of classes in the term, the above amount is retained, plus an additional percentage of the remaining tuition (as indicated in the schedule below), for each week, or part of a week, of the term up to the date on which the student's written notice of withdrawal is received by the Registrar.

Adjustment Schedule

Second Saturday after first

day of classes Week following second

Saturday after first day

of classes Second following week Third following week Fourth following week Fifth following week Sixth following week Seventh following week Eighth following week

Minimum Fees Retained

$40 or $75

40 or 75

40 or 75

40 or 75

40 or 75

40 or 75

40 or 75

40 or 75

40 or 75

Percentage of Remaining Tuition Retained

10 20 30 45 60 75 90 100 (no adjustment)

Application or Renewal of Application for a Degree

Degrees are awarded three times a year in October, January, and May. A candidate for any Columbia degree (except the Ph.D. degree) must file an application with the Registrar, 630 West 168th Street. In the 1982-1983 academic year, the last day to file for an October degree is August 2; for a January degree, November 5; and for a May degree, February 22. A late fee of $50 will be charged after these dates and until the expiration of the late filing period for each conferral date (September 9 for October degrees, December 5 for January degrees, April 1 for May degrees). Applications received after the late filing period will automatically be applied to the next conferral date.

If the student fails to earn the degree by the conferral date for which he or she has made application, the student may renew the application. A $50 late fee will be charged for late filing of renewals of application according to the same schedule as for original applications (see above.)

30 ADMISSION, REGISTRATION, EXPENSES, AND FINANCIAL AID

Requests for Transcripts

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 as amended prohibits the release of educational records by institutions without the specific written consent of the student or alumnus. Students or alumni may request copies of their records by writing to the Office of the Registrar, 201 Philosophy Hall, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 10027. Official copies will be sent directly by the University only to an official address such as another university, a business firm, or government agency. However, students or alumni may request that unofficial copies of their transcripts (stamped "Student Copy") be sent directly to them.

There is a charge of $5 for each transcript requested singly, or $5 for the first copy and $1 for each additional copy requested at the same time. There is no charge for intrauniversity copies sent between University offices. Transcript requests are processed in the order received and require five to seven working days for processing. Specific deadlines should be mentioned, and checks accompanying requests should be made payable to Columbia University.

Estimated Expenses

Current educational expenses for a student attending the College during the first academic year are as follows:

Tuition $9,990.00

Health and Hospitalization Insurance Fees 458.00

Books and supplies 730.00

Microscope rental cost and other equipment 570.00

In addition to the educational costs listed above, each first-year student should budget approximately $5,450 to cover housing ($2,200), food ($2,200), clothing, laundry and dry cleaning ($325), and miscellaneous expenses ($725).

There are differences in the length of each academic year, and living and miscellaneous expenses vary. Each year the College Committee on Financial Aid prepares a statement of estimated expenses for students in each year of the medical school curriculum. These statements are given to all financial aid applicants at the time of distribution of the financial aid policy statement.

Microscope, Instruments, and Books

Students are required to have microscopes for courses in the first and second years of medical school. A microscope rental service is operated by the Medical Center Bookstore. For students who wish to purchase a new or used microscope, the faculty recommends a binocular instrument of standard make, complete with carrying case, built-in illuminator, and quadruple nosepiece (4X, lOX, 40X, and lOOX oil-immersion objectives).

Students are required to purchase dissection equipment for the first-year course in gross anatomy and instruments for the diagnostic examination of patients.

The books required or recommended for courses of instruction are announced at the beginning of each academic year.

Housing

Bard Hall, at 50 Haven Avenue overlooking Riverside Park and the Hudson River, is the residence for students in the College. Its facilities include lounges, a cafeteria and several dining rooms, and a gymnasium with a swimming pool, basketball and squash courts, and facilities for other sports.

Room rates at Bard Hall depend on the length of the academic year and the room

FINANCIAL AID 31

assignment. Information on the cafeteria service, room application forms, and other details are provided for entering students by the Admissions Office. Selected one-bedroom apartments in the Bard Haven Towers are reserved for married students. Other one-, two-, and three- bedroom apartments can be rented by groups of single students.

For further information concerning on- and off-campus housing on or near the Health Sciences Campus, write to the Assistant Director of Residence Halls, Bard Hall Office, 50 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Apartments are available for married students in Bard Haven Tower I on the Medical Center campus. Married or single students may rent apartments in Towers II and III; the rents are higher. Information may be obtained from the Manager, Bard Haven Towers, 100 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Financial Aid

All financial aid awards are based on demonstrated need. Each year applicants for financial aid are required to borrow a sum of money (unit loan) before becoming eligible for scholarships administered by the College. Financial aid awards are intended to supplement, rather than substitute for, the student's resources and parental contributions.

The federal government makes available each year a limited number of one-year full scholarships for first-year students of Exceptional Financial Need (EFN). Funds are allocated to medical schools, who are responsible for selection of EFN recipients. Students need not request consideration for these funds directly. Awards are determined from the information provided on the financial aid application. Continuation of federal funding for this program is uncertain.

Upon acceptance by the College, students receive the financial aid policy statement, loan interest and repayment information, and an application form which must be completed promptly. Students enrolled in the College are informed annually about the policies for the coming academic year and the dates for submission of the financial aid application and loan applications. Further information may be obtained from the Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, telephone (212) 694-4100.

Spouses of medical students should consult the personnel offices of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and of the Presbyterian Hospital for information regarding employment opportunities at the Medical Center.

Scholarships

Students are urged to determine the availability of scholarship assistance from the states in which they reside and to make application for such funds when appropriate. As an example. New York State provides funds through the Tuition Assistance Program to residents who meet financial qualifications. In addition. New York State offers the Regents Physician Shortage Scholarship, which is intended to ease the physician shortage in certain areas of the state. The Financial Aid Office provides interested students with the necessary information on applica- tions for these programs. Applicants to medical school should also consult college premedical offices for information on the competitive New York State Regents Scholarships for Professional Study of Medicine. Applications are due the October prior to matriculation.

Among nongovernmental sources of funding there is the National Medical Fellowships, Inc., which awards fellowships to needy black Americans, American Indians, Mexican-Americans, and mainland Puerto Ricans. Applicants must be citizens of the United States or permanent residents (visa status). Awards are given to first- and second-year medical students. Enrolled medical students should apply to NMF at 250 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 before March 1 for financial assistance for the second year of medical school. Applicants to medical school should request information from NMF.

The R.G. Haddad Foundation Scholarship is available for enrolled medical students who are United States citizens of Syrian or Lebanese descent. Applicants must have verified financial need. A grant for one year may be renewed upon application. The Financial Aid Office of the

32 FINANCIAL AID

College of Physicians and Surgeons advises students of the availability of this scholarship annually.

There are a number of scholarship funds administered by the Financial Aid Office of the College. With the exception of the Lawrence John Durante Scholarship (see below), students do not apply directly for these scholarships. The named scholarships listed below have been donated by alumni, foundations, corporations, and friends of the University and are awarded to qualified students by the Financial Aid Office.

Endowed Scholarship Funds

ALLEN Gift of Mrs. Vivian B. Allen.

ALUMNI A limited number of national scholarships. Provided by gifts from the P&S Alumni Association and other contributors.

ANONYMOUS Several; awarded annually.

BANBURY From the Banbury Scholarship Fund.

ALICE IDA AND ABRAHAM PENNER BERNHEIM SCHOLARSHIP FUND For tuition.

ISAAC J. AND RENA HENLY BERNHEIM Given by the family in honor of Isaac J. and Rena Henly Bernheim.

ELSIE J. BIRTWHISTLE Founded by the will of Morell Birtwhistle, in memory of his wife.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, JR. From the George Blumenthal, Jr., Fund.

ELIZABETH ROCK BRACKETT SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Dr. Brackett, the income to be used for scholarship assistance for women medical students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

DR. HARRY BRITENSTOOL MEMORIAL From the estate of Mrs. Blanche B. Ostheimer, in memory of her brother.

LUCIEN AND ETHEL BROWNSTONE MERIT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND A merit scholarship awarded every four years.

DR. MOSES R. BUCHMAN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students, with preference given to those who are residents of Westchester and who plan to practice pediatrics. Established by friends of Dr. Buchman.

DAVID C. BULL MEMORIAL In memory of Dr. David C. Bull, a former member of the Department of Surgery.

RICHARD BUTLER Open to men born in the state of Ohio who are qualified for admission to, and plan to enter, Columbia College, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, or the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ALONZO CLARK Founded by the will of Alonzo Clark, M.D., LL.D., for many years president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1890 Given by a member of the class.

CLASS OF 1899 Given by the class in commemoration of the thirty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1912 Given by the class on the fifteenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1913 For medical student scholarships.

FINANCIAL AID 33

CLASS OF 1920 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1924 To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of their graduation.

CLASS OF 1928 Given at their tenth reunion.

CLASS OF 1932 For a scholarship room. Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1 933 For a scholarship .

CLASS OF 1934 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1936 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1937 Awarded for tuition of medical students.

CLASS OF 1938 Awarded annually to assist a student in the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1939 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1940 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1942 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1952 Given by members of the class on the tenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1953 Given by members of the class.

CLASS OF 1964 Established in memory of Dr. Howard Gerstel.

HENRY D. CRUGER Bequest of Helen Cruger, in memory of the Henry D. Cruger family.

CHARLES A. DANA FOUNDATION, Inc. Established by the Foundation.

ANTHONY M. DeANGELIS Open to a student of the fourth-year class. Given by Dr. Anthony M. DeAngelis.

HORACE DENNETT Open to students in the third- and fourth-year classes.

DAVID M. DEVENDORF Preference is given to a candidate from Herkimer County, New York, preferably one from the town of Herkimer. Given by Mrs. David M. Devendorf of Herkimer, New York, in memory of her husband, Dr. David M. Devendorf, Class of 1861.

FRANCIS E. DOUGHTY Given by Miss Phoebe Caroline Swords, in memory of Dr. Francis E. Doughty, Class of 1869.

LAWRENCE JOHN DURANTE Given by members of the Class of 1961, in memory of Lawrence John Durante. Awarded annually to a senior student with verified financial need by the Durante Scholarship Fund Committee after review of the applications of qualified students.

EDWARD PERCY EGLEE Bequest of Edward Percy Eglee, Class of 1913, member of the Faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons from 1919 until his retirement in 1953, when he was a clinical professor of medicine.

JOSEPH HERMAN AND HANNAH EICHNER Established by the will of Benjamin Bernard Eichner, Class of 1919.

JOSEPH C. FOSTER Given by Mrs. Esther J. Foster, in memory of her husband.

VIRGINIA KNEELAND FRANTZ Bequest of Dr. Frantz.

34 FINANCIAL AID

NELLIE ALDEN FRANZ Bequest of Nellie A. Franz to Columbia University for scholarships to worthy young women for undergraduate or graduate study, with preference for those interested in medicine, nursing, sociology, and journalism.

GEORGE AND CHARLIE Given by the Alumni Association of the College, in memory of George Peters and Charles Costello, long-time employees of the Medical Center.

JACOB HARSEN Given by Dr. Jacob Harsen.

FRANK HARTLEY Given by friends and colleagues of Dr. Frank Hartley, class of 1880.

WILLIAM H. HEMINGWAY

AARON HIMMELSTEIN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students. Given by Dr. Himmelstein's friends and colleagues.

IRMA T. HIRSCHL SCHOLARSHIPS From the estate of Irma T. Hirschl. Awarded on the criteria of financial need, outstanding scholarship and dedication to medical science, the easing of pain and protection of life.

CHARLES EUGENE HUBER, SR. Bequest of Francis D. Huber, in memory of his father.

FRANCIS HUBER Open to a graduate of any institution other than Columbia University, City College, Barnard College, or Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

VIOLA B. HUBER Open to a graduate of Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ABRAHAM JACOBI For graduates of Columbia University and City College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber, in memory of Dr. Abraham Jacobi.

EDWARD R. JEAL Awarded to deserving students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

CHARLES CHRISTIAN LIEB Awarded to a student interested in the study of pharmacolo- gy. Given in memory of Dr. Charles Christian Lieb, Hosack Professor of Pharmacology.

LI MING Awarded with preference to students of Chinese birth or descent or nationality. Established by bequest of Mr. Li Ming.

MARJORIE McANENY Open to a graduate of Barnard College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ELIZABETH HALL McCULLOGH Given by Mrs. William G. Heaphy, in memory of her sister. Dr. Elizabeth McCullogh, an alumna of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

HERBERT D. MANLEY Given as bequest by the late Dr. Herbert D. Manley.

FRANCIS HARTMAN MARKOE Given by Madeline Shelton Markoe, in memory of her husband.

M. MONTGOMERY MAZE From the estate of M. Montgomery Maze, Pearl River, N.Y. Part of this fund may be used for scholarships and/or fellowships, preferably for graduates of the Pearl River High School.

MABEL C. MEAD Awarded to women students of Chinese ancestry. Preference given to those desiring to study medicine.

VIVIAN AND SEYMOUR MILSTEIN ENDOWMENT FOR SCHOLARSHIPS Established by the donors in honor of their friends and physicians, Drs. David Habif and Duane Todd.

SAMUEL J. MORITZ MEMORIAL Given by the executors of the estate of Samuel J. Moritz.

FINANCIAL AID 35

GULLI LINDH MULLER Bequest of the donor to be awarded with preference to a gifted woman student.

P&S SCHOLARSHIP AID AND LOAN FUND Established by the wives of the members of the Faculty of Medicine, faculty, and friends of the College.

RUDOLPH AND MARY E. PFEIFFER Given by Mrs. Mary E. Pfeiffer.

PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIP Granted with preference to sons or daughters of alumni of Presbyterian Hospital. Given by the Society of the Alumni of Presbyterian Hospital.

WILLIAM COLE RAPPLEYE Established at the retirement of Dean Rappleye.

RICHARD RHODEBECK Given by Mrs. Richard Rhodebeck, in memory of her husband.

DAVID H. ROUS From family, friends, and business associates of David H. Rous, the income to be divided equally among the Graduate School of Business, Columbia College, and the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

LOUIS AND RACHAEL RUDIN Established by the Rudin Foundation for students of excellence who would not otherwise be able to complete their education.

SAGAMORE Awarded to needy students.

JOSEPH F. SAPHIR MEMORIAL Given by Elsa M. Saphir, in memory of her husband, Joseph F. Saphir, Class of 1902.

THE MARY S. SAXE SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Mary S. Saxe.

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Given by faculty members, alumni, and students, in honor of Dr. Severinghaus's services to the College.

BERNARD E. SMITH MEMORIAL Given by Mrs. Gertrude Smith, in memory of her husband.

THE JAMES A. STEVENSON MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by Mrs. Ann Stevenson Hardesty, in memory of her brother James Albert Stevenson, Class of 1943.

EDGAR EGINTON STEWART, Jr., MEMORIAL Given by Dr. E. E. Stewart, in memory of his son.

ARTHUR PURDY STOUT MEMORIAL Given by the Arthur Purdy Stout Society.

ARNOLD STURMDORF Awarded to one or more students in their third or fourth year of medical school. Bequest of Miriam Sturmdorf.

HAROLD S. VAUGHAN Bequest of Dr. Harold Vaughan, Class of 1904.

ANDREA VICALE MEMORIAL Established by Dr. Carmine T. Vicale, in memory of his father.

HERMANN VOLLMER Established in his memory by his wife.

THEODORE L. VOSSELER Preference is given to graduates of Colgate University. Given by Dr. Allison J. Vosseler, Class of 1933, in memory of his father, Dr. Theodore L. Vosseler.

ROBERT M. WECHSLER Given by Dr. I. S. Wechsler, in memory of his son, Robert M. Wechsler, Class of 1945, and by members of the class of 1945, in memory of their classmate.

WHITING -Dr. FORDYCE B. St. JOHN SCHOLARSHIP FUND Gift by the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation, in honor of Dr. Fordyce B. St. John.

36 FINANCIAL AID

Dr. JAMES LANCELOT WILSON Awarded to a student selected by the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

JOHN C. WOOD MEMORIAL Established by family and friends in memory of Dr. Wood, Class of 1976.

Gift Funds

CITIBANK MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by the Citibank. The recipient must have demonstrated need for support and he/she must be a New York State resident.

VALERIE AND GEORGE DELACORTE FOUNDATION Annual gift.

GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP GIFT FUND Gifts and memorials by various donors.

CHARLES F. IKLE SCHOLARSHIP AND RESEARCH FUND Grant by the New York Community Trust.

JAMES T. LEE FOUNDATION, Inc. Annual grant to medical students.

JULIUS E. STOLFI MEDICAL EDUCATION AND RESEARCH FUND SCHOLARSHIP

THE SULZBERGER FOUNDATION Annual gift. Awarded to senior students with very good academic records, significant financial need, and plans to pursue careers in family medicine or general internal medicine in nonurban areas.

Loans

Loans are available to all full-time medical students. These funds are provided by various sources, including the federal and state governments, the University, and also private agencies, as outlined below.

Foreign students who hold an F-1 student visa are eligible to borrow only from University funds and must have comakers who are citizens or permanent residents of the United States. Comakers should not be University employees. Foreign students may borrow from federal or state loan funds upon being granted permanent resident visa status in the United States.

Health Professions Student Loans. These are allocated by the Bureau of Health Manpower of the National Institutes of Health to individual medical schools, which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be loaned. Assuming the availability of adequate funding, the maximum loan to a student in an academic year is the cost of tuition plus $2,500. Loans are repayable to the school over a ten-year period beginning one year after completing or interrupting the prescribed full-time course of study. Interest at the annual rate of 9 percent begins to accrue when the loan becomes repayable.

Repayment of Health Professions Loans may be deferred up to three years for those who become members of a uniformed federal service on sustained full-time duty (i.e., the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Coast and Geodetic Survey), the Public Health Service, or the Peace Corps. For those pursuing advanced professional training, repayment may be deferred to completion of the training program. Interest does not accrue during period of deferment.

Health Professions Loans are forgiven or cancelled under certain conditions: (1) In the instance of students who agree to practice medicine for at least two years in a region of a state that has been determined to need additional personnel, the federal government will repay 60 percent of the outstanding principal and interest on any educational loan(s) for the cost of professional education. For a third year of practice in such an area, an additional 25 percent of the loan(s) will be repaid. (2) The outstanding loans of students who fail to complete their health professions studies will be repaid if they are in exceptionally needy circumstances, from a

FINANCIAL AID 37

low-income or disadvantaged family, and cannot be expected to resume studies within two years. (3) Loans of students who die or suffer permanent and total disability will be cancelled. Repayment of loans for service in shortage areas is subject to annual allocation of funds from the federal government.

National Direct Student Loans. Funds are allocated by the Office of Education to schools which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be awarded. The total (undergraduate and graduate school loans) available to a student from the NDSL program is $12,000. The current interest rate, payable during the repayment period, is 5 percent on the unpaid principal. Repayment begins six months after graduation or after leaving school. The repayment period may extend up to ten years. Repayment may be deferred for up to three years during active U.S. military service, during service in the Peace Corps or Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), during service in the National Health Service Corps, or for up to two years during service in an internship required to begin professional practice.

Federal and State Guaranteed Loans. Under the auspices of the Bureau of Student Financial Assistance of the Department of Education, federally insured loans are available to students with demonstrated financial need. The loans are made by authorized banks, savings-and-loan associations, credit unions, pension funds, and insurance companies. The maximum loan each academic year under this program is $5,000, and the total outstanding loan balance at any one time may not exceed $25,000. Lending institutions participating in this program can provide information regarding interest rates, repayment, and deferment of repayment.

Auxiliary Loan to Assist Students. ALAS is a new federally insured loan program available to graduate students, who may borrow up to $3,000 a year at 14 percent interest. Repayment of the principal is deferred while students are in school full time, but interest payments must be made while enrolled. Since authorized deferments are the same as those for the guaranteed student loan program, a student may continue to pay interest only during the first two years of residency, beginning repayment of both principal and interest following that period. The aggregate indebtedness for graduate students is $15,000 under this program. This loan must be taken at the same bank as the GSL if a student borrows a GSL in New York State. This rule may also apply in other states. Students who are not New York State residents should be able to make an ALAS loan at a bank in New York if they are unable to borrow from their local lender.

Health Education Assistance Loans. HEAL is a federally insured loan program available to students in the health professions. Currently, all HEAL lenders use a promissory note with a variable interest rate. The rate is reassessed quarterly and is calculated by taking the interest rate on the ninety-one day Treasury Bill plus an additional S'/a percent. Interest on this loan begins to accrue immediately, there is a nine-month grace period after graduation. However, if the borrower becomes an intern or resident in an accredited program before that date, repayment will begin from nine to twelve months after the borrower ceases to be an intern or resident. A list of lenders is available from the Federal government.

P&S Dean s Loan. The Dean's loan fund is a program established by the College to offset the burden of high interest loans to students with a high degree of demonstrated financial need. Terms of the loan are available in the Financial Aid Office.

University loan funds axe also intended to supplement students' resources when monies are available. Included among these are the following funds:

PETER AMAZON Bequest of Peter Amazon.

LEONARD ALEXANDER ARMS Bequest of Lydia B. Arms, in memory of her husband, to create a revolving loan fund for scholarship and research to medical students and graduate students at P&S.

38 FINANCIAL AID

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, Jr. Used for the assistance of needy students in the medical school.

CLASS OF 1906 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1906.

CLASS OF 1919 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1919. To be used for loans to deserving students.

CAROL ELISSA GARDNER Established by Dr. M. Jordan Thorstad, in memory of his wife, Dr. Carol Elissa Gardner Thorstad, Class of 1941.

DAVID GREENE A bequest from the estate of Fannye Greene Meyerson, in honor of her brother. Dr. David Greene. Used for assistance of needy students in the medical school and Columbia College.

GEORGE L. HAWKINS, Jr. Gift of George L. Hawkins, Jr., Class of 1941.

B. H. HOMAN, JR., REVOLVING LOAN FUND Long-term, low-interest loans for needy students.

ROBERT ABBE MACKENZIE Established by friends, colleagues, and patients of Dr. MacKenzie, an alumnus of the Class of 1921.

GEORGE W. MERCK MEMORIAL Established by the Merck Company Foundation in honor of George W. Merck. For graduates of P&S, wherever they are in training, or to graduates of other medical schools in training at hospitals affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

JESSIE SMITH NOYES

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Established by the Clark Foundation as an unrestricted, discretionary fund to be used primarily for the support of students and student activities. Priority given to fourth-year students who are subjected to increased living and transportation costs because of electing clerkships at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, N.Y.

WALTER C. AND MARJORIE C. STEIN Bequest of Marjorie C. Stein.

STEINHARDT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Bequest of Samuel C. Steinhardt. Awarded to graduates of one of the colleges of the City University of New York who have attended public schools exclusively (except for religious instruction). To be repaid in fifteen years; without interest for the first ten years; with 5 percent annual interest thereafter on the unpaid balance.

In addition to the foregoing, periodically there are funds for short-term emergency loans, which are administered through the Financial Aid Office of the medical school.

Prizes

Dr. HARRY S. ALTMAN PRIZE Awarded to an outstanding senior student who demon- strates a special interest in pediatric ambulatory care. Established to honor Dr. Harry S. Altman, in recognition of his outstanding contributions to scholarship in pediatrics.

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AWARD Given for outstanding achievement.

HERBERT J. BARTELSTONE AWARD IN PHARMACOLOGY Awarded to a member of the graduating class of the College who has demonstrated exceptional accomplishments in pharmacology. Established to honor the memory of Professor Herbert J. Bartelstone, member of the Department of Pharmacology from 1950 until 1973, dedicated and inspiring teacher.

FINANCIAL AID 39

and uncompromising advocate of the importance of rigorous preparation in basic medical science in the education of the physician.

COAKLEY MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Otolaryngology to a senior student who has done outstanding work in the field.

TITUS MUNSON COAN PRIZE Awarded to the senior student who has submitted the best essay in biological science or otherwise best contributed to its advancement. Bequest of Titus M. Coan.

THOMAS F. COCK, M.D., PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for excellence in obstetrics and gynecology.

FREDERICK PARKER GAY MEMORIAL AWARD Awarded to the senior student whose work in microbiology is judged the most outstanding. Given by Mrs. Frederick Parker Gay, in memory of her husband.

JANEWAY PRIZE Awarded to the student graduating from the College with the highest marks for efficiency and ability. Given by the bequest of Matilda S. J. Wisner.

Dr. HAROLD LAMPORT BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for the best thesis reporting original biomedical research. Gift of the Lamport Foundation.

ROBERT F. LOEB AWARD Awarded to a senior student who, in the opinion of the Department of Medicine, has shown the greatest promise of excellence in clinical medicine. Established in memory of Dr. Robert F. Loeb, Bard Professor of Medicine, and chairman of the Department of Medicine from 1947 to 1959.

F. PHILIP LOWENFISH PRIZE IN DERMATOLOGY Awarded to the individual who has done the most creative and original research in dermatology. Given by Mrs. Lowenfish, in her husband's memory.

EDITH AND DENTON McKANE MEMORIAL AWARD Bequest of Edith U. McKane. Awarded to a senior student for excellence in basic or clinical research in ophthalmology.

Dr. HAROLD LEE MEIERHOF MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded on recommendation of the professor of pathology to the student who has done the best work in the field during the four years of medical school. Given by the parents of Dr. Harold Lee Meierhof, Class of 1917.

NEW YORK ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL AWARD An annual prize awarded to a senior student upon nomination by the Department of Orthopedic Surgery, for outstanding perfor- mance in the field.

JOSEPH GARRISON PARKER AWARD Awarded to the senior in the College who best exemplifies, through a continued personal interest and activities in art, music, literature, or the public interest, the fact that Living and Learning go on together. Given by Dr. and Mrs. Philip Parker, in memory of their son, Joseph, Class of 1948, whose promising career in medicine was cut short by death in 1953, but in whose life the love of music and the arts was a constant source of inspiration.

P&S CLASS OF 1924, Dr. ALLEN O. WHIPPLE MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded to a senior student, upon nomination of the Department of Surgery, for outstanding performance in the field.

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Psychiatry to a second-year student for the best work in psychopathology.

SAMUEL W. ROVER AND LEWIS ROVER AWARD An annual prize to be awarded to a graduating medical student or a male graduate student for scholarship and outstanding achievement in biochemistry at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

40 FINANCIAL AID STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES

ANN RYAN PRIZE IN BIOCHEMISTRY To be awarded to deserving women graduate students.

HELEN M. SCIARRA PRIZE Awarded to a senior student in the College for outstanding work in neurology.

Dr. ALFRED STEINER AWARD Presented annually to one or more students chosen by a faculty committee on the basis of achievement in medical research. Funded by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in honor of Dr. Steiner.

Dr. HAROLD B. STEVELMAN AWARD Awarded to a senior student for excellence in adult cardiology. In honor of Dr. Harold Stevelman, Class of 1958, in appreciation of his service to the family of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert.

UROLOGY PRIZES Awarded to senior students for the best essays on urological subjects.

Dr. WILLIAM PERRY WATSON PRIZE IN PEDIATRICS Awarded on the nomination of the professor of pediatrics to that member of the graduating class of the College who has shown the most notable work in the study of the diseases of infants and children.

Dr. WILLIAM RAYNER WATSON AWARD Awarded to that member of the graduating class who has done the most outstanding work in psychiatry during the four years of attendance at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

SIGMUND L. WILENS PRIZE Awarded to a member of the graduating class who, in the opinion of the Department of Pathology, has been distinguished by special excellence in pathology. Gift of Dr. Marie Renate Dische Wilens, in memory of her husband, Dr. Sigmund L. Wilens.

Student and Alumni Activities

All students enrolled in the College enjoy the privileges and facilities of the University campus, including the University libraries.

P&S Club

The P&S Club was founded over eighty years ago by John R. Mott, who later won the Nobel Peace Prize. The Club is the most active and comprehensive student organization in American medical education today. All matriculated students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are members, eligible to participate in extracurricular activities of their choice. Under the guidance of the Faculty Advisory Board, the student cabinet, led by the president, assumes the entire responsibility for management of the Club. The cabinet consists of four elected members from each class and those who chair the following committees: Orientation, Handbook, Student-Faculty Home Visits, Films, Concerts, Choral Society, Bard Hall Players, Fine Arts, Athletics, Community Youth Work, Accessories, Social, and Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Society.

Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society

A chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha, the national honor medical society, was founded at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1907. Students are elected to membership in the senior year by a committee of the faculty appointed by the Dean. The committee is chaired by the Alpha Omega Alpha Councilor of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Student member- ship is determined according to the constitution of the national society. Election is limited to those whose scholastic qualifications place them in the upper 25 percent of the class. The

STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES 41

number of student members elected from any class may not exceed one-sixth of the number expected to graduate in that class. Although scholastic excellence is required for membership, integrity, capacity for leadership, compassion, and fairness in dealing with one's colleagues are judged to be of equal significance.

P&S Alumni Association

The P&S Alumni Relations Office serves to foster and maintain cordial relationships between the College of Physicians and Surgeons and its alumni and is responsible for alumni relations programs and the Alumni Annual Fund. Liaison with the College is facilitated through the office of the Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs.

Regular members of the Alumni Association include all those awarded the M.D. or Med.Sc.D. degrees from the College, as well as those awarded the Certificate in Psychoanalytic Medicine. Associate members include faculty members of the College, all house staff members and visiting fellows at hospitals affiliated with P&S, and all Ph.D. graduates of the Basic Sciences Curricula.

The work of the Alumni Association is accomplished through the efforts of its officers and members of the fifteen standing and ad hoc committees, all of whom form the constituency of the P&S Alumni Council. Among the important functions of the Association is participation in the publication of P&S, a magazine that is cosponsored by the alumni and the medical school and serves as a major form of communication between the school and its alumni, faculty, students and their parents, and other friends and associates of the College.

Restricted revenues raised by the Alumni Association provide funds for endowed scholarshps at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and toward the endowment of a P&S Alumni Professorship. Unrestricted revenues allow the College flexibility in applying funds to areas of greatest need. Traditionally, a substantial stipend from unrestricted revenues goes to the P&S Club as well as to scholarship aid.

As future alumni, students play an important role in the work and deliberations of the Alumni Association. Through their membership on the Student-Alumni Relations Committee, students and alumni work together in addressing students' needs and concerns.

Information about the Alumni Association and its activities is available from the P&S Alumni Relations Office, 2005-C Black Building, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032. Telephone (212) 694-3498.

The Program of Instruction

The first-year curriculum is largely devoted to basic science courses with correlation clinics to demonstrate the application of scientific information to the practice of medicine. The first-year student also studies the impact of health care systems in our current society on the individual patient and physician. Second-year courses concentrate on the clinical relevance of basic science concepts as the bridging process to clinical instruction begins. Correlations between pathology and pathophysiology are emphasized. The development of basic clinical skills begins in the second semester and culminates in a four-week clerkship. Throughout both preclinical years elective opportunities are available for pursuit of areas of interest.

The major clinical year is devoted exclusively to rotations on clerkships in the clinical disciplines. Under close supervision the students are helped to develop the skills and knowledge required for the practice of clinical medicine. Students learn to elicit a comprehen- sive history and to carry out a complete physical examination. They learn to develop professional relationships with patients, and they acquire an understanding of the mechanisms of disease and of the principles necessary for valid diagnostic appraisal and effective therapeutic plans.

All courses of the first three years of the curriculum are required of all students. In the fourth year, with the guidance of faculty advisers, students design individual elective curricula, drawn from a wide range of basic scientific electives, clinical electives, and research programs offered by the faculty. Each fourth-year student is required to take a one-month elective in ambulatory care which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. The elective courses of all departments are described in a catalog which is printed annually and distributed to students and faculty. Students are permitted to spend three months of the curriculum in elective programs offered by other medical schools. In addition, the School of Public Health offers international medicine programs that provide opportunities to study the organization and delivery of health services in many countries of the world.

During the elective curriculum students have available the resources of the entire University. Students are encouraged to utilize elective curriculum time to reach career decisions. Faculty advisers stress the acquisition of knowledge and skills in areas of medicine apart from the student's career discipline, and they encourage students to gain experience in clinical and/or laboratory research.

The College reserves the right to make changes in the program of studies and courses of instruction at any time.

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence

All courses are rated on an Honors-Pass-Fail system and these ratings only are recorded on the official transcripts. Students are not ranked within the class. Faculty provide narrative descriptions of student performances in preclinical courses (Abnormal Human Biology, Introduction to the Patient, and Psychiatric Medicine I and 11), major clinical year clerkships, and elective programs. These evaluations become part of the student's permanent academic record in the Office of the Dean.

There are three standing faculty committees concerned with students' academic perfor- mances. These committees are; the First Year Class Faculty, the Second Year Class Faculty, and the Clinical Committee. The latter deals with academic performances in the major clinical year and the elective curriculum. The standing committees meet during each academic year to review student performances and to make decisions related to course failures and to promotions. Course failures in all years of the curriculum must be corrected according to the directives of the faculty committees. A student may be advanced to the next academic year of the medical school curriculum only upon recommendation of the faculty committee. In any year of the curriculum students may be dismissed for poor scholarship. Repetition of a year of the

44 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

curriculum may be recommended by a faculty committee. The faculty committees may direct students whose performances are marginal to undertake additional work to correct deficiencies and strengthen overall performance in any discipline.

Students are informed in writing of the academic decisions of all faculty committees. Students have the right to appeal decisions of the faculty committees. A student who wishes to appeal may request the concerned committee to reverse or alter a decision. If the committee reaffirms the original decision, the student may direct an appeal to the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, who may refer the appeal to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Council for final decision.

The Faculty of Medicine reserves the right to dismiss, or to deny admission, registration, readmission, or graduation to any student who in the judgment of the Faculty of Medicine is determined to be unsuited for the study or practice of medicine.

Students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are required to pass National Board Examinations Parts I and II prior to graduation.

Leaves of absence may be granted by the Dean for a limited period of time in exceptional circumstances only for health reasons or personal emergencies.

Key to Course Numbers

Medical Center courses: The suffixes F and S refer to first- and second-year courses, respectively. Numbers without a suffix indicate major clinical year clerkships that are repeated throughout the year in instruction periods of twelve weeks or less.

Summary of Curriculum (for students entering in September 1982)

First Year

SEPTEMBER 1, 1982, to JANUARY 12, 1983. First semester. JANUARY 17, 1983, to JUNE 10, 1983. Second semester.

Second Year

SEPTEMBER 1, 1983, through MAY 31, 1984.

Third and Fourth Years

JULY 1, 1984, through APRIL 30, 1986.

Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses of the First and Second Years

Abnormal Human Biology 101 S.

Dr. Canfield and interdepartmental associates: Cardiology, Dr. Drusin; Pulmonary, Dr. Harvey; Endocrinology-Metabolism, Dr. Holub; Gastroenterology, Dr. Click- man; Hematology, Dr. Bank; Immunology, Dr. Butler; Infectious Diseases, Dr. Neu; Oncology, Dr. Ellison; Nephrology, Dr. Al-Awqati; Surgery, Dr. Lo Gerfo. Exercises in the application and correlation of the basic sciences to a broad range of clinical problems. Teaching is by seminar/lecture and is closely integrated with courses in pathology, pharmacology, and introductory medicine.

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 45

Anatomy lOlF. Microscopic anatomy Dr. Nunez and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies of structure in relation to function.

Anatomy 102F. Human anatomy

Drs. April, Moss, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory enconnpassing basic morphological and functional human anato- my.

Anatomy 103F. Developmental anatomy Dr. Pfenninger and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and laboratory emphasizing the fundamental processes of embryogenesis; closely integrated with Anatomy lOlF Microscopic anatomy.

Biochemistry lOlF. Introductory biochemistry Dr. Gold and departmental staff.

Lectures and conferences stressing principles of biochemistry and their relationship to disease processes.

Genetics lOlS. Medical genetics Dr. William Johnson and associates.

Lectures and clinical presentations emphasizing the practice of clinical genetics and the application of principles of genetics to the medical specialties.

Medicine lOlS. Introduction to the practice of medicine Drs. Canfield, Marcus, and associates.

Lectures, conferences, and seminars addressing ethical and personal issues relevant to the practice of medicine.

Medicine 102S. Introduction to the patient Dr. Morris and associates.

A series of interdepartmental presentations and demonstrations followed by an intensive four-week preceptorship (at Harlem, Overlook, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital) during which the student will learn to take a comprehensive medical history and to perform a complete physical examination.

Microbiology lOlF. General microbiology Drs. Erianger, Ginsberg, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory covering the basic principles of cell regulation, immunology, virology, and the biology of pathogenic organisms.

Anatomy-Physiology 106S. Neural science

Drs. Kandel, Kelly, Kupfermann, Rowland, Schwartz, and Spencer.

Lectures, seminars, laboratories, and clinical demonstrations to provide an integrated understanding of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, biochemistry, and behavior.

Nutrition lOlF. Introduction to nutrition Dr. Winick and associates.

Lectures that define the elements of nutrition essential for good health.

Pathology lOlF. General pathology Dr. C. Fenoglio and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory emphasizing the mechanisms of injury and repair in cells, tissues, and organ systems.

Pathology 102S. Systemic pathology Dr. C. Fenoglio and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies to elucidate the pathogenesis of findings in disease.

Pathology 103S. Neuropathology Dr. Duffy and associates.

Lectures, demonstrations, and microscopic studies of diseases of the nervous system.

46 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Pharmacology lOlS. General and special pharmacology Dr. Kahn and departmental staff.

Lectures, seminars, and demonstrations to elucidate the basic principles essential for the effective use of drugs as therapeutic or diagnostic agents.

Medicine 105F. Physician-patient relationship Dr. Park and associates.

Preceptor sessions emphasizing the central role of the physician-patient relationship in the practice of medicine and the importance of the effects of health care organization and other factors on that relationship.

Physiology 101 F. Human physiology Dr. Nocenti and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and conferences to define the function of specific cells, tissues, and organs and their homeostatic mechanisms.

Psychiatry lOlF. Psychiatric medicine, I Dr. Arkow and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars presenting the salient features of normal development.

Psychiatry 102S. Psychiatric medicine, II Dr. Arkow and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars covering the major mental illnesses and the elements of patient interviewing.

Public Health lOlF. Structure of health care systems Dr. Rosenberg and associates.

Lectures and seminar groups on the current organization of health care.

Public Health 102F. Epidemiology Dr. Paneth and associates.

Lectures and seminars to present epidemiological principles.

Public Health 103F. Biostatistics Dr. Fleiss and associates.

Lectures on the basic elements of biostatistics applicable to medicine.

Public Health 104F. Parasitic diseases Dr. Despommier and associates.

Lectures and laboratories stressing parasitic diseases likely to be encountered and the techniques necessary for the diagnosis of these diseases.

Major Clinical Year

Anesthesiology 201. Clinical clerkship in anesthesiology Dr. Bendixen and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship that provides training in preanesthetic evaluation, management, and postanesthetic care of surgical patients. At the conclusion of the clerkship students should be able to do the following: (1) describe the major factors to be considered in selecting anesthetic drugs and techniques for patients undergoing common surgical procedures; (2) describe indications for positive pressure ventilation of the lungs and how the adequacy of such ventilation can be determined; (3) differentiate between a patent and obstructed airway in a patient and demonstrate on a patient or mannikin his/her ability to obtain a patent airway by positioning; (4) describe the indications for use of an endotracheal tube; (5) describe procedures used for resuscitation of a patient who has had cardiac arrest and demonstrate on a mannikin his/her ability to perform mouth-to-mouth ventilation and closed chest cardiac massage; (6) describe indications for and contraindications to the use of local anesthetics to provide infiltration and nerve block anesthesia; and (7) describe the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of local anesthetic drug toxicity.

Dermatology 201. Dr. Harber and staff.

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 47

Medicine 201. Clinical clerkship in medicine

Dr. Loeb and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's

Hospitals.

Extended clinical experience under a preceptorship system at Presbyterian Hospital and at another affiliated hospital, Harlem, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital. At the conclusion of the clerkship the student should be capable of taking a precise medical history, performing an accurate physical examination, interpreting basic laboratory data, formulating a cogent problem list, and communicating these data in accurate verbal and written form. These skills will be acquired in the patient care setting in order to increase the student's understanding of the physiologic, psychologic, and social aspects of medicine and to prepare the student for the assumption of clinical responsibility under close supervision.

Neurology 201. Clinical clerkship in neurology

Dr. Rowland and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

A comprehensive experience in clinical neurology provided at the bedside at the Neurological Institute. Under close supervision of a junior and senior resident and an attending physician in neurology, students learn to obtain a systematic neurological history and to perform and interpret the neurological examination. By active participation in the evaluation and care of patients, expertise is obtained in the diagnosis and treatment of common neurological diseases. Students learn how to do a lumbar puncture and they become familiar with elcctrodiagnostic and neuroradiological tests. Experience is also obtained in neurosurgery and rehabilitation medicine. Management of neurological emergencies is learned during night call with the senior resident. In addition, a comprehensive core knowledge of clinical neurology is ensured by a course syllabus, daily rounds, and preceptor sessions with the attending physician.

Neurology 202. Neurosurgery

Dr. Stein and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Obstetrics and Gynecology 201. Clinical clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology Dr. Vande Wiele and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology under close supervision of house staff and attendings. On the gynecological wards and in the clinics the student learns to take a sexual and gynecological history, to examine the breasts, abdomen, and pelvis, to distinguish normal and abnormal findings relative to gynecological disease, and to diagnose and manage benign and malignant gynecologic tumors. The student acquires the skills needed to approach problems of sexuality and an understanding of the impact of changing physiological states in menarche and menopause. On the obstetrical service the student learns the medical and surgical complications encountered during pregnancy and delivery, and the student learns to diagnose and manage pregnancy. The student participates in the conduct of labor, the delivery, and the care of the newborn.

Ophthalmology 201. Clinical clerkship in ophthalmology Dr. Campbell and staff.

Orthopedic Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in orthopedic surgery Dr. Garcia and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

On the orthopedic surgery clerkship students learn to perform an orthopedic physical examination and to take an orthopedic history from a patient. The clerkship provides students with insight into the more common musculoskeletal problems (including fractures and trauma) and the basic approaches to management of these problems by an orthopedic surgeon. The student is expected to gain insight into how the discipline of orthopedic surgery works in conjunction with other specialties and how an orthopedic service provides in-patient and out-patient care.

Otolaryngology 201. Clinical clerkship in otolaryngology Dr. Abramson and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship designed to teach the skills of physical examination of the ear, nose, and throat and to provide an understanding of certain diseases where this examination is crucial in diagnosis and management. The clerkship includes selected didactic lectures, followed by a preceptor-type experience in the clinic where students examine and work up a number of patients under the direct supervision of a faculty member.

48 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Pediatrics 201. Clinical clerkship in pediatrics

Dr. Katz and staff at the Babies Hospital (Presbyterian), Harlem, Roosevelt, and

St. Luke's Hospitals.

A clinical clerkship providing both in-patient and ambulatory care experience. The student is introduced to the study of infants and children: growth and development, diseases, and health care maintenance. The student develops basic skills in the following areas: taking the pediatric history from the parents eind from the older child; performing the physical examination of the pediatric patient, including the young infant; observing, analyzing, and recording the interaction between parent and child; and ordering and interpreting laboratory tests. The student learns to integrate the data acquired and formulate an appropriate problem list and plan for the patient. The student also learns to make the basic measurements of physical, neurological, and psychosocial growth and development, and to plot and assess the data.

Psychiatry 201. Clinical clerkship in psychiatry

Dr. Malitz and staff at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Harlem, Presbyte*

rian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in psychiatry. In active participation in patient care under faculty supervision the student is expected to learn to conduct a psychiatric history and mental status examination and to develop refined interviewing skills, noting verbal and nonverbal behavior. The student learns to make a psychiatric differential diagnosis, to use psychotropic drugs effectively, to evaluate suicide potential, and to develop and enhance therapeutic rapport. The clerkship aims to provide an appreciation of the effects of psychological, social, and biological phenomena on illness-related behaviors.

Radiology 201. Diagnostic radiology (medical) Dr. Seaman and staff.

Radiology 202. Diagnostic radiology (surgical) Dr. Seaman and staff.

Rehabilitation Medicine 201.

Dr. Downey and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in surgery

Dr. Reemtsma and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A comprehensive clinical clerkship during which the student is expected to demonstrate improvement in ability to perform histories and physical examinations on surgical patients and to formulate rational diagnostic and therapeutic plans. The student is expected to demonstrate increasing skill and competence in performing selected procedures, in assuming supervised responsibility for patient care, in communicat- ing succinctly and with clarity to patients and colleagues, and in building a functional body of critically examined information regarding common surgical entities.

Surgery 202. Lectures and demonstrations in surgical pathology Drs. C. Fenoglio, Lane, and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Surgery 201.

Urology 201. Clinical clerkship in urology Dr. Olsson and staff.

During the clinical clerkship in urology students learn to identify common disorders of the genito-urinary tract through precise patient interviews and examinations. Both ambulatory and in-patients are evaluated. By knowing diagnostic methods unique to urology, students are able to formulate appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic plans.

Fourth Year

Interdepartment 301. Ambulatory care/public health selective Dr. C. Ortiz-Neu, course coordinator.

Each student in the fourth year is required to select an elective in ambulatory care, which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. (For the rest of the Fourth Year see page 43 and the elective catalogue.)

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 49

Special Programs

M.D.-Ph.D. Program

This is a cooperative program sponsored by the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and the College of Physicians and Surgeons for students who have had a strong undegraduate program in science and have a strong commitment to biomedical research. The program allows students to work toward the Ph.D. degree in one of the disciplines listed below in addition to earning the M.D. degree.

Students who wish to participate in the program must be admitted to the College of Physicians and Surgeons and to the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Separate applications must be made to the College of Physicians and Surgeons and to the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Students complete the basic science requirements of the medical program and enter a participating department of the Graduate School to carry out the Ph.D. program. They then complete the balance of the requirements for the M.D. degree.

The participating Ph.D. programs are:

Anatomy and Cell Biology Microbiology

Biochemistry Nutrition

Biological Sciences Pathology

Chemistry Pharmacology

Epidemiology Physics

Human Genetics and Development Physiology

Mathematical Statistics Psychology

For additional information students should write to Dr. David Schachter, Chairman, Graduate Biomedical Sciences Advisory Committee, Department of Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

To apply, students should request an application from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and an application from the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Joint M.D./M.P.H. Program

This dual degree program is under the joint direction of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the School of Public Health. In addition to preclinical and clinical medical training, students gain substantive knowledge of the health care delivery system and the technological, social, and political forces that contribute to the problems and patterns of illness, medical care, and delivery of services. They also develop concrete skills of research or administration applicable in interdisciplinary health service settings, both clinical and community based.

Before being considered for admission to the joint degree program, the applicant must first be accepted as a degree candidate in the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Formal application to the School of Public Health may then be made at any time before the student enters the fourth year of medical training. The overall length of the joint program, registration, and scheduling patterns differ for individual students. The total elapsed time could be as short as four years, but might extend beyond the four-year graduation date of the medical school. In general, during the first three years the joint degree student uses vacation and free time in the medical schedule to cross-register for public health courses. In the fourth year the student registers concurrently in the two schools, permitting opportunities to complete core, track, and elective public health courses and also carry the required clinical elective work in the medical curriculum. The M.D. and the M.P.H. degrees may be awarded simultaneously at the end of the fourth year; either degree may be awarded separately when the requirements have been met.

50 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

For further information, consult the Dean's Office in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y., 10032, or the Dean's Office in the School of Public Health, 600 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Educational programs are offered by the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine to students who have already earned a bachelor's degree. They may apply for admission to a two-year program leading to the Master of Science degree in physical therapy or occupational therapy, or a second professional Master of Science degree in occupational therapy education or occupational therapy administration. Details are given in the bulletin of Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy.

Program of the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

A course of training in the theory and practice of psychoanalytic medicine is offered through the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research of the Department of Psychiatry. The program, a minimum of four years in length, leads to the award of a certificate in Psychoanalysis. For details, see the bulletin of the Center (formerly the Psychoanalytic Clinic).

Programs in Nutrition

The Master of Science program, administered by the Postgraduate Division of the Faculty of Medicine, is a twelve-month program that serves as a foundation for students who plan to continue for the Doctor of Philosophy degree or to attend a professional school in the health sciences. In addition, the master's program is offered to physicians and other health specialists who wish to augment their training with a knowledge of nutrition.

Requirements for admission: a bachelor's degree from an accredited college, with a strong emphasis on the sciences, including two years of chemistry, one year of biology, and a course in elementary biochemistry. The Graduate Record Examination is required.

Under the jurisdiction of the Executive Committee on Graduate Instruction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, students may follow a program of studies leading to the Ph.D. degree. Course work and thesis research in nutritional biochemistry and in clinical and public health nutrition are carried out under the guidance of the Doctoral Program Subcommittee on Nutrition.

Requirements for admission: successful completion of the Master of Science degree program as outlined above, or the equivalent, and demonstrated scholarly ability in pursuing advanced studies and research. In addition, students must fulfill the general requirements for the degree which govern all Ph.D. candidates in the University.

A program of postdoctoral training in nutrition is offered for qualified individuals having the degree of Doctor of Medicine or the degree of Doctor of Philosophy who intend to pursue careers in teaching and research in nutrition. The program includes clinics, selected nutrition courses, seminars, and participation in research projects, with a view to qualifying the individual for teaching in medical schools or in nutrition departments of graduate schools. Specific training is given in the areas of nutrition and development, prenatal growth, obesity, endocrinology, and nutrition and metabolism. This program has considerable flexibility and is arranged with the individual to suit his or her particular goals and needs.

Inquiries concerning the above programs may be directed to the Office of the Director, Institute of Human Nutrition, 701 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 51

Program in Clinical Genetics

While patient services in genetics are rendered through the existing clinical departments of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the teaching, research, and clinical services in genetics are coordinated and integrated by the Program in Clinical Genetics, under the chairmanship of Dr. Arthur Bloom, Professor of Pediatrics and of Human Genetics and Development. The membership of this committee includes physicians and scientists from the Department of Human Genetics and Development and from numerous other departments of the College.

The Program in Clinical Genetics offers fellowships in genetics and training in the genetic aspects of a wide range of medical and surgical specialties. The Program provides postgrad- uate clinical teaching, elective courses for medical students, and regular conferences on clinical genetics. The clinical and laboratory facilities of the Presbyterian Hospital, Babies Hospital, and other affiliated hospitals are all utilized in the Program, and the research laboratories of the Department of Human Genetics and Development actively participate in it.

Interested applicants should write for further information to the Chairman, Program in Clinical Genetics, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry

The program of study in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, which leads to the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, is under the jurisdiction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Information about admission and degree requirements and courses of instruction is given in the bulletin of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship

Through the kindness of generous donors, the resources of the Faculty of Medicine include several distinguished lectureships and a visiting professorship:

The Cartwright Lecture Fund, established under the will of Benjamin Cartwright, made possible biennial lectures under the sponsorship of the P&S Alumni Association during the period 1881 - 1912. A new series of Cartwright Lectures was inaugurated under the College's auspices in November 1974.

The Alexander Ming Fisher Lectures were established under the terms of the will of Dr. A. M. Fisher's half-brother, E. Douglas Southwick, to make possible lectures on the general theme of Death and Dying.

The Michael Heidelberger Lectures were begun in 1955 to honor the notable contributions of Dr. Heidelberger, now Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry, and to stimulate further scientific progress in immunochemistry and related disciplines.

The David Seegal Lectureship and Visiting Professorship Fund, given by the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society and others, provides for the appointment of a visiting professor who is in residence for five days. During this time he or she delivers the David Seegal Lecture on Chronic Disease.

Prizes and Awards

The Distinguished Service Award o{ the College of Physicians and Surgeons is given annually at Commencement exercises to a member of the faculty for outstanding contributions to medicine.

52 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, the recipient of which traditionally gives a public lecture, was established under the will of the late S. Gross Horwitz in honor of his mother and is given annually in recognition of outstanding basic research in the fields of biology or biochemistry.

The Joseph Mather Smith Prize is awarded to the graduate of the College whose original research in medical subjects is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be the most meritorious.

The Stevens Triennial Prize is awarded to the person, not necessarily a graduate of the College, whose original research on any medical subject is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be the most meritorious.

The Dean's Award for Outstanding Contributions to Teaching was inaugurated in the mid-1970s as an appropriate way to recognize faculty members who are notably effective as teachers or leaders in education.

m ^'

Postgraduate Programs

Opportunities for continuing medical education beyond the M.D. degree are offered at the College of Physicians and Surgeons through three major programs: (1) the training of specialists by means of hospital residencies; (2) special courses in general medicine and in the specialties, for practicing physicians and physicians in training who wish to renew and continue their educational experiences in the various fields of medicine; and (3) the Doctor of Medical Science Program, for physicians with particular interest and competence in research in the basic sciences. Further information about these programs may be obtained from the Office of the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine.

Graduate Training of Specialists

The program offers training opportunities through fellowships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and residencies at affiliated hospitals for holders of the M.D. degree. Proper training for specialization includes four major elements. First, it provides a comprehensive clinical experience as a resident in a hospital that is equipped and staffed to provide graded responsibilities under the supervision of experts in the selected specialty. Second, it disciplines the resident in scientific attitudes toward health and disease and enriches the clinical experience through advanced training in those medical sciences that are largely concerned with the resident's specialty. Third, it enables the resident to see and to begin to understand the effect of illness on the individual patient and the response of that person to the illness and to the physician. The relationships that the resident physician develops with individual patients set the pattern for his or her participation in the delivery of health care after the completion of the residency. Finally, it gives the student the opportunity, either as a resident or as a fellow, to do basic or clinical research. This, in turn, may stimulate the type of creative productivity that may earn the student a recommendation for admission to a program leading to the award of the Doctor of Medical Science degree.

Postgraduate Courses for Practicing Physicians and Specialists

A variety of short courses have been organized at hospitals and clinics affiliated with the University; they are available at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and at the other affiliated hospitals. No University credit or certificates are granted for these courses, but continuing medical education credit is granted through the Physicians Recognition Award of the American Medical Association.

Courses for the general practitioner furnish opportunities to keep abreast of new knowledge and the latest methods of diagnosis, treatment, and prevention; and to learn the indications, limitations, and value of those technical procedures that require the attention of a qualified specialist. The instruction consists largely of first-hand clinical experience, lectures, demonstra- tions, and discussion.

For those already practicing a specialty, advanced instruction is given in the therapeutic and diagnostic methods of certain limited fields of practice. Enrollment is limited to those who have the preparation necessary to enable them to benefit by the advanced instruction.

Program for the Doctor of Medical Science Degree

The University confers the Med.Sc.D. degree upon a few physicians who have completed a research project in one of the basic science fields. Only staff members of the Columbia- Presbyterian Medical Center are eligible for this degree. A minimum of two years of full-time work in the basic science field is required. Additional requirements include completion of a significant and original research project, the passing of comprehensive and oral examinations, and submission of a dissertation.

Departments of Instruction

Listed are only those faculty appointments and promotions approved by July 1, 1982.

The designation "also" is used with the name of an individual holding a joint appointment in two departments. The designation "in" is used when an individual holds an appointment in the department where listed, with assignment to the department named after the "in." In either case, the name appears in both departmental lists.

Anatomy and Cell Biology

Professor and Chairman

Michael D. Gershon. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D.. 1963

Professors

Melvin L. Moss. B.A., New York University, 1942; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

Charles R. Noback. B.S., Cornell, 1936; M.S., New York University, 1938, Ph.D., Minneso- ta, 1942

Karl H. Pfenninger. M.D., Zurich, 1971

Virginia M. Tennyson (also Pathology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor, 1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Adjunct Professors

Manfred Otto Nahmmacher. Ph.D., Giessen (Germany), 1960

Samuel Rosner. M.D., Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons (Edinburgh), 1940; F.I.C.S., 1951

Professor of Clinical Surgery

Bard Cosman. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

Associate Professors

Ernest W. April. B.S., Tufts, 1961; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969

Philip W. Brandt. B.A., Swarthmore, 1952; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia,

1960 Stephen B. Doty (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965 Eladio A. Nunez. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1951; M.S, 1953; Ph.D., New York

University, 1964 Ann-Judith Silverman. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1967; Ph.D., 1970

Adjunct Associate Professor

Richard M. Hoar. B.A., Dartmouth, 1950; Ph.D., Kansas, 1956

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Arline D. Deitch. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

58 ANATOMY AND CELL BIOLOGY ANESTHESIOLOGY

Assistant Professors

Richard T. Ambron. B.S., Villanova, 1965; Ph.D., Temple, 1971

Craig H. Bailey (in Psychiatry and the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.A., Lehigh,

1967; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., 1973 Halina Den (in Neurology). B.S., Frankfort, 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954; Ph.D.,

Michigan, 1958 Abraham B. Eastwood (in Neurology). B.S., Muhlenberg, 1965; M.S.. Lehigh, 1967; Ph.D.,

1971 James P. Kelly. B.A., Harpur, 1966; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1971 Marie-France Maylie-Pfenninger. Baccalaureate, Algiers, 1960; L. esSc, Marseilles, 1963;

Docteur de Speciality, 1967; Ph.D., 1972 Tuan Due Pham (also Pharmacology). B.S.. St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S., Loyola, 1967;

M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 Taube Pearl Rothman. B.A., City College, 1969; Ph.D., Cornell, 1975 Samuel Mark Schacher (in Psychiatry and the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.S.,

Columbia, 1971; M.A., 1974; Ph.D., 1976 Klaudiusz R. Weiss (also Psychiatry) (in Dentistry) (in the Center for Neurobiology and

Behavior). M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony Brook),

1973

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Robert Bowker (in Psychiatry). B.S., Springfield 1969; V.M.D., Pennsylvania, 1973; Ph.D.,

1979 Ian Blair Fries. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968

INSTRUCTOR SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Sharon C. Colacino, Ph.D. Diane L. Sherman, B.S.

LECTURER

Cheryl F. Dreyfus. Ph.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Ira Wallis, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Brian John Oldfield, Ph.D.

Anesthesiology

Professor and Chairman

Henrik H. Bendixen. M.D., Copenhagen, 1951

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland). 1941:

M.D., Geneva, 1957 Lester C. Mark. M.D., Toronto, 1941

Gabriel G. Nahas. M.D., Toulouse, 1944; Ph.D.. Minnesota, 1953 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Pharmacology). M.B.. National Central (Nanking). 1944

Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Leonard Brand. B.S., Yale. 1946; M.D.. Columbia, 1949

Edgar C. Hanks. B.A.. Gettysburg, 1943; M.D., Jefferson, 1947

Ernest Salanitre. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1936; M.D.. Rome, 1942

ANESTHESIOLOGY 59

Adjunct Professor

Sidney Spector (also Pharmacology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jefferson, 1956

Associate Professors

Allen 1. Hyman (also Pediatrics). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College,

1959 Hisayo O. Morishima. M.D., Toho (Tokyo), 1951; Ph.D., Tokyo, 1959 Eugene J . Pantuck . B.S., Tufts, 1 959; M.D., 1 963 J. Gilbert Stone. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1964 Lubos Triner. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1955; Ph.D., 1961

Associate Clinical Professor

Jen-Tieng Wung. M.D., Taipei Medical College, 1956

Associate Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Richard S. Matteo. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1955 Hilda Pedersen. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1958

Assistant Professors

Jeffrey Askanazi. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1971; M.D., State University of New

York (Syracuse), 1975 Keith J. Bernstein. B.A., New York University, 1968; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1974 Walter A. Boyle 111. B.S., California State (Long Beach), 1973; M.D., California (San

Francisco), 1977 Richard Y.Z. Chen. M.D., National Taiwan (Taipei), 1971 Arvin H. Chin. B.S., Cornell, 1970; M.D., 1974; J.D., Columbia, 1981 Paul Dalecki. B.S., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1973; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1976 Michael C. Damask. B.A., Case Western Reserve University, 1970; M.D., Chicago Medical

School, 1974 Foun-Chung Fan. M.D., Taipei Medical College (Taiwan), 1972 Arthur Donald Finck. B.S., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Ingrid Anne-Marie Fitz-James. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1973; M.D., Columbia, 1977 Warren K. Grodin. B.A., Minnesota, 1967; M.D., London, 1975 Hoshang Jal Khambatta. M.D., Karachi, 1958 Vance Lauderdale. B.A., Harvard, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1947 Pat J. Martin. B.S., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Eugene Ornstein. M.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1973; Ph.D., 1977; M.D., Miami

(Florida), 1979 Leila M. Pang (also Pediatrics). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1970 Richard K. Raker. B.A., Michigan, 1969; M.D., 1973 David M. Richlin. B.A., Drew, 1970; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry,

1974 Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A.. Harvard, 1969; M.D.,

Cornell, 1973 Jeffrey Sherman. B.A., State University of New York (Downstate), 1973; M.D., New York

Medical College, 1978

60 ANESTHESIOLOGY

Yvonne Vulliemoz. M.S., Lausanne, 1956; Ph.D., Paris, 1969

Sook Young Woo. B.S., Ewha Women's University (Seoul), 1968; M.D., 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Dorothy A. Black. B.A., Rutgers, 1957; M.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Donald C. Brody. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1956

Kathryn A.W. Cozine. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1961

Ellise S. Delphin. B.A., Barnard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975

Alber Faltas. M.D., Kasr-El-Ainy Medical School (Egypt), 1 961

Carolyn P. Greenberg. B.A., Stanford, 1962; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1966

John W. Hennessey. B.S., Massachusetts, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1966

Ina Lieberman. B.A., Barnard, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968

Dudley D. McDaniel. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1971; M.D., Autonoma (Mexico), 1975

Peter Salgo. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975

Kevin B. Sanborn. B.S., Manhattan, 1969; M.D., New York University, 1973

Medhat Riad Wassef. M.B., B.Ch., Cairo, 1957

Gerald S. Weinberger. M.D., New York University, 1948

Marcelle M. Willock. B.A.. New Rochelle, 1958; M.D., Howard, 1962

Joseph Chuan-Shih Yang. B.S., Taiwan, 1959; M.D., Medical Academy (Dusseldorf), 1964

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATES

Salha S. Daniel, Ph.D. (continued) j^^^^ q Tioo\ey, M.A.

Ira Rampil, M.S. Mariagnes Verosky, B.A. Carol Pantuck, B.A.

Atsutoshi Tsuji, M.D., Ph.D. Alvin Wald, Ph.D. Jeffrey M. Wagner, M.A.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Andrew L. Rauscher. M.B., London, 1963; M.B.B.S., University College Hospital, 1966

Assistant Clinical Professor

Edward Palmer. B.A., Dartmouth, 1967; M.D., Cornell, 1971

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Herbert G. Cave. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1942; M.D., Howard, 1947

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Mita Dhruvkumar Gunderia. B.S., Wilson College (Bombay), 1970; M.D., Grant (Bombay),

1976 Archibald K. Hinds. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Montpellier, 1962 Gilbert Phanor. B.S., Lycee T. Cilboro, 1953; M.D., Medical School of Haiti, 1960 Madisetti Swamy. M.B., B.S., Osmania (India), 1954 J. Sinclair Trimiar. B.S., Howard, 1960; D.D.S., 1964 Francis Weekes. B.S., Johnson C Smith, 1941; D.D.S., Meharry, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Samuel C. Brisbane. B.A., Lincoln, 1937; M.D., Howard, 1949 Oscar N. Graves. B.A., Lincoln, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1949

ANESTHESIOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY 61

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

John Rocco Calabro. B.S., Manhattan, 1971; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1975 Henry A. Connolly, Jr. B.S., Fordham, 1951; M.D., Hamburg, 1955 Demetrios B. Kalas. M.D., Aristotelian, 1954 Mary Louise White. B.S., Maryland 1943; M.D., 1945

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY

Sami A.M. Abadir, M.D. Jane deV. Stark, M.D. Carol E. Zimmerman, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Professor

Louis Blancato. B.S.. Fordham, 1942; M.D., New York Medical College, 1945

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Ennio Gallozzi. M.D., Rome, 1953

Joseph lacovelli. B.A., Buffalo, 1952; M.D., Bologna, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Ronald A. Andree. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1955; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1959 Aino Tuul. M.D., Tartu (Estonia), 1942

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

ANESTHESIOLOGY ANESTHESIOLOGY

Guglielmina Bettini, M.D. Julio M. Garcia Rodriguez, M.D.

Hilda S. Liu, M.D. Byung Yang Kim, M.D.

Alfred T.C. Peng, M.D. Zdan J. Korduba, M.D.

Altragracia H. Polanco, M.D. Han Ghiang Lee, M.D.

Ignacio U. Ngo, M.D.

Kyaw Nyunt, M.B., B.S.

Kenneth A. Rothenberg, M.D.

Kristappa Sangavaram, M.D.

Biochemistry

Robert Wood Johnson, Jr., Professor and Chairman

Isidore S. Edelman. B.A., Indiana, 1941; M.D., 1944

University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director, Institute of Cancer Research). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S., Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1944

62 BIOCHEMISTRY

Professors

Richard Axel (also Pathology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970

Reinhold Benesch. B.Sc, Leeds, 1941; M.Sc, 1945; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1950

Ruth E. Benesch. B.Sc, London, 1946; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1951

Max A. Eisenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1938; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Duke,

1950 Philip Feigelson. B.S., Queens (New York), 1947; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1951 Robert F. Goldberger. M.D., New York University, 1958 Dezider Grunberger (also Public Health). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D.,

Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; ScD., 1968 Barry Honig. B.Sc, Polytechnic Institute (Brooklyn), 1963; M.A., Johns Hopkins, 1964;

Ph.D., Weizmann Institute (Israel) Arthur Karlin (also Neurology). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Alvin I. Krasna. B.A., Yeshiva, 1950; Ph.D., Columbia, 1955 Seymour Lieberman (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois,

1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941 Barbara W. Low. B.A., Oxford, 1942; M.A., 1946; D.Phil, 1948 Maurice M. Rapport (in Psychiatry). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; Ph.D.,

California Institute of Technology, 1 946 Parithychery Srinivasan. B.Sc, Madras, 1946; Ph.D., 1953

Adjunct Professor

Benno P. Schoenborn. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1958; Ph.D.. New South Wales (Australia), 1962

Associate Professors

Roger M. Burnett. B.Sc, The Polytechnic (London), 1964; Ph.D., Purdue, 1970 Allen M. Gold. B.A., Chicago, 1950; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Adjunct Associate Professor

John D. Karkas. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Senior Research Associate

David Elwyn (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

George Alexander (in Psychiatry). B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers. 1953

Frederick W. Alt. B.S, Brandeis, 1971; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978

Hagan P. Bayley. B.A., Oxford, 1974; Ph.D.. 1979

Gerard Bricogne. Maitrise de Mathematique, Nancy (France), 1971; Diplome d'Engenieur,

1972; Ph.D.. Cambridge. 1977 Stephen Goff. B.A., Amherst, 1973; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978 Irving Goodman (in Surgery). B.A., Colorado, 1939; M.S.. 1941; Ph.D.. 1944 Lee Makowski. B.S., Brown. 1971; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1973;

Ph.D.. 1976 Herbert L. Meltzer (in Psychiatry). B.S., Long Island. 1942; Ph.D., Columbia. 1950 James L. Roberts (in International Institute for Study of Human Reproduction). B.S..

Colorado State, 1973; Ph.D.. Oregon, 1977 Kamil Ugurbil. Ph.D., Columbia. 1977 Bonnie Ann Wallace. Ph.D., Yale, 1977

BIOCHEMISTRY DERMATOLOGY 63

ASSOCIATE

Carola P. Zimmerman, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Philip Eric Bourne, Ph.D. Martha Redden Kimball,

Ph.D. Jade Li, Ph.D. Richard S. Magliozzo, B.A. Sahebarao Mahadik, Ph.D.

(in Psychiatry) Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.,

(in Obstetrics

and Gynecology) Eftihia Tzilianos, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR

Karen A. Bucher, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Marek Ciurak, Ph.D. Stephen L. Ginell, Ph.D. Duane L. Guernsey Hiroko Kakitani, Ph.D. Susanna Yung Kwong, M.S. James Pachence, Ph.D. Thomas Allen Pressley,

Ph.D. Alexander Rashin, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES {continued)

Addison Rosenkrans, Ph.D. Lisa B. Shih, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Erwin Chargaff, M.D. Zacharias Dische, M.D.,

(in Ophthalmology) Karl Meyer, M.D.,

(in Ophthalmology) David Nachmansohn, M.D.,

(in Neurology) David B. Sprinson, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Adjunct Associate Professor

Theodore Peters, Jr. B.S., Lehigh, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1950

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Leonard A. Sauer. M.D., Rochester, 1961; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1966

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Utapalendu S. Maitra, Ph.D. Venkitachalem P. Mohan, Ph.D.

Dermatology

Professor and Chairman

Leonard C. Harber. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., New York University, 1953

At Presbyterian Hospital

Clinical Professor

Saul L. Sanders. B.A., Kenyon, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1952

Associate Professor

Richard L. Edelson. B.A., Hamilton, 1966; M.D., Yale, 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Dermatology

Maureen B. Poh. B.S., Siena, 1964; M.D., Tennessee, 1967

64 DERMATOLOGY

Associate Clinical Professors

Jack Eisert. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956 David N. Silvers (also Pathology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968 Robert R. Walther. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., North Carolina, 1973 Richard L. Walzer. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Assistant Professors

Alan D. Andrews. B.S., Illinois, 1968; M.D., Virginia, 1972

Robert B. Armstrong. B.A., Haverford, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Vincent A. DeLeo. B.S., Louisiana State, 1965; M.D., 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Irving Abrahams. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1954 Vincent S. Beltrani. B.A., Brooklyn, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 William De Pietro. B.S.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1972; M.D., Georgetown.

1976 Marc E. Grossman. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1972; M.D., Pennsylvania,

1974 Eric W. Herman. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1972; M.D., Mt. Sinai,

1976 Einar A. Juhlin. B.S., Illinois, 1950; M.D., Royal Charles (Sweden), 1957 Steven R. Kohn. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1968 Theodor A. Labow. B.S., Miami, 1951; M.D., Tufts, 1955 Jack H. Rozen. B.S, Pittsburgh, 1958; M.D., 1962

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

William G. Atwood, M.D. Robert P. Feinstein, M.D. Paul Ira Schneiderman,

M.D. Eugene W. Sweeney, M.D. Harvey I. Weinberg, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Carol L. Berger, Ed.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Timothy J. Corey, M.D. Leon K. Demar, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued) Jeffrey S. Kezis, M.D. Stanley J. Lewis, M.D. Joseph A. Penner, M.D. Douglas Pravda, M.D. Joseph S. Shapiro, M.D. Luis A. Suarez, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

William J. Cunningham,

M.D. Joan P. Noroff, M.D. Margaret S. Ravits, M.D.

ASSISTANTS [continued]

Kass Sadri, M.D. Robert S. Seibt, M.D. George E. Thome, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Francis P. Gasparro, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER Margarita S. Hutner, Ph.D.

LECTURER

Angelo A. Lamola, Ph.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Alexander W. Young, Jr., B.S, Maryland, 1944; M.D.. 1946

Assistant Clinical Professors

Herbert H. Hochman. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., Tulane, 1970 Peter C. Lombardo. B.S., Rochester. 1955; M.D., Albany 1959 Da vid Sibulkin . B.A., New York University, 1 962; M.D., 1 966 Gregory Zalar. B.S., George Washington, 1965; M.D., 1969

DERMATOLOGY HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT 65

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Joshua S. Berger, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY Elaine V. DiGrande, M.D.

Human Genetics and Development

Professor and Chairman

Charles R. Cantor. B.A., Columbia, 1963; Ph.D.. California (Berkeley), 1963

University Professor

Sol Spiegelman (Director, Institute of Cancer Research). B.S.. College of the City of New York, 1939; M.S., Columbia, 1942; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1944

Professors

Kimball C. Atwood. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., New York University, 1946

Arthur Bank (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., 1960

Arthur D. Bloom (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Argiris Efstratiadis. Dr.Med.Sd., Athens (Greece), 1971; M.D., 1966; Ph.D., Harvard,

1976 Georgiana Jagiello (also Virgil Damon Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Boston,

1949; M.D, Tufts, 1955 Elvin A. Kabat (also Microbiology) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Orlando J. Miller (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950

Professor of Mathematical Statistics and Genetics

Howard Levene (in Biological Sciences and Mathematical Statistics). B.A., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Columbia, 1947

Adjunct Professors

Sidney Udenfriend. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; Ph.D., New York

University, 1948 Arthur Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1947; Ph.D., Columbia, 1953 Herbert Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; M.S., George Washington,

1955; Ph.D., 1957

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

L. Erlenmyer-Kimling. B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1960 John D. Rainer. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.A., 1944; M.D., 1951

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ronald H. Kaback. B.A., Haverford, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Michael Ian Sherman. B.Sc, McGill, 1965; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony

Brook), 1969 David Webb. B.A., California State, 1966; M.A., 1968; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Dorothy Warburton. B.S., McGill, 1957; Ph.D., 1961

66 HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT MEDICINE

Senior Research Associates

Harold I. Calvin (in International Institute for Study of Human Reproduction). B.A.,

Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1964 Fred R. Kramer. B.S., Michigan, 1964; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1969 Dorothy A. Miller. B.A., Wilson, 1952; Ph.D., Yale, 1957 Donald R. Mills. B.A., Indiana, 1962; M.A., 1964; Ph.D., Illinois, 1968

Assistant Professors

Frank Costantin. B.S., Yale, 1974; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1980 Marian B. Carlson. B.A., Radcliffe, 1973; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978 Ann S. Henderson. B.S., Winthrop, 1960; Ph.D., North Carolina, 1966 Debra Wolgemuth. B.A., Gettysburg, 1969; M.A., Vanderbilt, 1971; M.Phil., Columbia, 1975; Ph.D., 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Mary Rita Greenwood. B.A., Vassar, 1968; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1973

RESEARCH ASSCX:iATES STAFF ASSOCIATES

Carl S. Dobkin, Ph.D. Ye-Chin Choi, Ph.D.

Jye Siung Fang, Ph.D. Margot Kaelbling, Ph.D.

Harlow K. Fischman, Ph.D. Ming-Tsung Yu, Ph.D. LECTURER

Jerard Hurwitz, Ph.D.

Medicine

Professor of Clinical Medicine and Acting Chairman

Thomas Q. Morris. B.A., Notre Dame, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Arthur Bank (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D.,

Harvard I960 J. Thomas Bigger (also Pharmacology). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Vincent P. Butler, Jr. B.A., St. Peter's, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Robert E. Canfield. B.S., Lehigh, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1957 Paul J. Cannon. B.A., Holy Cross (Massachusetts), 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958 Leonard Chess. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1964; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1968 Rose R. Ellison (in the Cancer Center). B.A., Barnard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1948 Andrew G. Frantz. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 Robert M. Glickman. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 DeWitt S. Goodman (Tilden-Weger-Bieler Professor of Preventive Medicine). B.A., Harvard,

1951; M.D., 1955 Rejane S. Harvey (Dickinson W. Richards Professor). B.A., Vassar, 1939; M.D., Columbia,

1943 John N. Loeb. B.A., Harvard 1957; M.D., 1961

Harold C. Neu (also Pharmacology). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Hymie Nossel. M.B., Ch.B., Cape Town, 1953; Ph.D., Oxon, 1962

MEDICINE 67

Elliott F. Osserman (American Cancer Society Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D.,

1947 Benvenuto Pernis (also Microbiology). M.D., Milan, 1947 Richard A. Rifkin (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1952; M.D.,

Columbia, 1955 John V. Taggart (also Physiology). M.D., Southern California, 1940 Donald F. Tapley. B.S., Acadia, 1948; M.D., Chicago, 1952 Gerard M. Turino. B.A., Princeton, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1948 I. Bernard Weinstein (also Public Health). B.S., Wisconsin, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

Felix E. Demartini. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1946

Donald A. Holub. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1952

Israel Jaffe. B.S., New York University, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Edgar Leifer. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., Columbia, 1939; Ph.D.,

1941; M.D., 1946 Robert Palmer. B.A., Oberlin, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957 Joseph C. Sweeting. B.S., Holy Cross, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1956 Robert N. Taub. B.A., Yeshiva, 1957; M.D., Yale, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1969 Robert T. Whitlock. B.A., North Carolina, 1950; M.D., 1957

Professor of Social Medicine

Robert J. Weiss (also Psychiatry and Public Health). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Clinical Professors

Stuart W. Cosgriff. B.A., Holy Cross, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942 John R. Edsall. B.A., Cambridge, 1945; M.B., B.Ch., 1948 Jay I. Meltzer. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Richard J. Stock. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947 John A. Wood. B.A., Harvard, 1943; M.D., 1946

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Physiology). M.B., Ch.B.,. Baghdad, 1962

Leslie Baer. B.A., Wisconsin, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

John P. Bilezikian (also Pharmacology). B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Peter R.B. Caldwell. B.A., Dartmouth, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958

Alan Tall. M.B., B.S., Sydney (Australia), 1970

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Ronald E. Drusin. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Yale Enson. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1953

Dorothy Estes. B.S.. Wheaton (Massachusetts), 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Glenda J. Garvey. B.A., Wellesley 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Elsa-Grace V. Giardina. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., New York Medical College, 1965

Robert H. Heisenbuttel. B.A., Thiel, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Wylie C. Hembree III (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D.,

Washington (St. Louis), 1964 Thomas P. Jacobs. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1968 George W. Mclcher, Jr. B.A., Colorado, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946 Jane H. Morse. B.A., Smith, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

68 MEDICINE

James A. Reiffel. B.A., Duke, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Frank R. Smith. B.A., Dartmouth, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Michael M. Stewart. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Melvin B. Weiss. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1962; M.D., State University

of New York (Downstate), 1967 Francis M. Weld. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Associate Clinical Professors

Ralph S. Blume. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

John O. Burris. B.S., Wyoming, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1956

Michael H. Cohen. B.A.. Johns Hopkins, 1961; M.D., 1965

Peter A. Gross. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Yale, 1964

Lionel Grossbard. B.A.. Columbia. 1957; M.D.. 1961

George A. Hyman. B.A.. Columbia, 1942; M.D., 1945

Abbie I. Knowlton. B.A.. Bryn Mawr, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

William Lovejoy. B.A.. Yale. 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1962

David J. McConnell. B.A.. Cornell, 1958; M.D.. Yale, 1962

George H. McCormack, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Hans Neuberg. B.A., Wagner. 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Earl A. Wheaton, Jr. B.A.. Princeton, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Assistant Professors

Gerald B. Appel. B.A.. Cornell, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Conrad B . Blum . B.S., North western, 1 969; M.D., 1 971

Thomas A. Brasitus. B.A., Connecticut, 1967; M.D., Jefferson, 1971

Randolph Cole. M.D.. State University of New York (Downstate), 1973

Nicholas Davidson. M.B.. B.S., Kings College Hospital Medical School (London), 1974

Oliver T. Fein. B.A., Swarthmore, 1962; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1967

Steven M. Friedman. B.A., Princeton, 1968; M.D., Cornell, 1972

Steven Grant. M.D., Mt. Sinai Medical School. 1973

James P. Halper. B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D.. 1971

Oscar Irigoyen. B.S., Military Lyceum (Buenos Aires), 1965; M.D., Buenos Aires, 1971

Kung-Ming Jan (also Physiology). M.B., National Taiwan, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971

Karen L. Kaplan. B.A.. Miami (Ohio). 1963; M.D., Ph.D., Chicago, 1969

Allen Bryant Nichols. B.A., Yale. 1961; M.D., Virginia, 1971

Juan Oliver. B.A., Bachiller Institute. 1961; M.D., Barcelona (Spain), 1967

John Owen. B.ScM.. McMaster (Ontario), 1972; M.D., 1974

Constance Park. B.A.. Radcliffe, 1964; M.S.. Harvard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Marjorie Perloff. B.A., Bennington, 1965; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1969

Eric R. Powers. B.A.. Cornell. 1969; M.D., Harvard, 1974

Alice S. Prince. B.A.. Wellesley. 1971; M.D.. Columbia, 1975

Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969;

M.D., Cornell, 1973 William H. Sherman. B.S.. Pennsylvania State. 1967; M.D., Jefferson, 1969 Ethel S. Siris. B.A.. Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971

Assistant Professor of Physiology

Hugh Nellans. B.A.. Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Lester W. Blair. B.A.. Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

David K. Blood. B.A., Amherst, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Norma M.T.W. Braun. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

MEDICINE 69

Peter J. Buchin. B.A., Williams, 1970; M.D., Yale, 1974

Robert H. DeBellis. B.S., Queens (New York), 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Kenneth C. Fine. M.D., Catholic (Louvain, Belgium), 1970

Jerry Gliklich. B.A., Columbia, 1969; M.D., 1975

Mark J. Goldberger. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Peter Green. M.B., B.S., Sydney, 1970

Victoria E. Guy. B.A., Duke, 1968; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1976

Lynne L. Johnson. B.A., Wellesley, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Cheryl Kunis. M D. , Albert Einstein, 1975

Rafael A. Lantigua. M.D., Autonomous (Santo Domingo), 1972

Oscar Lebwohl. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1972

Frank S. Livelli. B.A., Columbia, 1972; M.D.. Harvard, 1976

Aaron Manson. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1972; M.D., 1976

Robert McConnell: B.A., Hamilton, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Robin O. Motz. B.A., Columbia, 1959; Ph.D., 1965; M.D., 1975

Carmen Ortiz-Neu. B.A., Wellesley 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Martin W. Oster. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971

Kenneth M. Prager. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Harvard 1968

Marshall Primack. B.A., Louisville, 1961; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1965

Frederick G. Rapoport. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

John L. Roglieri. B.A., B.S., Lehigh, 1960; M.D., Harvard. 1966

Mario Romagnoli. B.S., Fordham, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976

Harvey A. Schneier. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1967

Peter E. Schrag. B.A., Harvard I960; M.D., 1964

Allan Schwartz. B.S., City College, 1967; M.D., Harvard 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Alan H. Seplowitz. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., 1972

Richard V. Sims 111. B.A., Amherst, 1970; M.D., Harvard 1974

Marjorie Slankard-Chakinian. B.A., Missouri, 1967; M.D., 1971

Leonard Stern. B.A., Brooklyn, 1972; M.D., New York Medical College, 1975

Mark Stoopler. B.S., Tulane, 1971; M.D., Cornell, 1974

Joseph Tenenbaum. B.A., Brandeis, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1974

Byron Thomashow. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

Jack B. Weissman. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Harvard, 1970

Gail S. Williams. B.A., Wellesley 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968

Chun Keung Yip. B.S., St. Francis (New York), 1972; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1976

Assistant Professors of Clinical Social Work

Dena Fisher. B.A., Queens (New York), 1965; M.S. W., New York University 1968 Elizabeth R. Prichard. B.A., Adelphi, 1943; M.S., New York School of Social Work, 1947

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alfred Becker. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Clarence J. D'Alton. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Richard B. Duane, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Juan G. Edreira. M.D., Havana, 1951

Daniel L. Larson. M.D., Columbia, 1946

Arnold Lisio. B.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1961

Daniel L. Macken. B.A., Holy Cross, 1955; M.D., Boston, 1960

Michael F. Parry B.A., Yale, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

John Postley. B.A., Yale, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968

Nicholas Rango. B.S., St. Louis, 1966; M.D., Northwestern, 1970

Arthur I. Snyder. B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1950

Jeffrey A. Stein. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Cornelius J. Tyson. B.A., Princeton, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

70 MEDICINE

Assistant Clinical Professor of Social Medicine

Eric R. Marcus (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Marcia B. Bull, M.D. James Coromilas, M.D. Elias M. Kaimakliotis, M.D. Robert Lewy, M.D. Alan L. Saroff, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN SOCIAL MEDICINE

Arthur L. Caplan, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Steven Birkin, Ph.D. Bonnie Bray, M.D. Gordon A. Campbell, Ph.D. Joseph Ceretta, Ph.D. Tukaram V. Darnule, Ph.D. Paul Ehrlich, Ph.D. Lloyd Fleisher, Ph.D. James Koehn, Ph.D. Chung Y. Liu, Ph.D. Mohammed M. Osman,

D.V.M. Ildiko Radichevich, Ph.D. Rajasekhar Ramakrishnan,

Eng.Sc.D. Steven L. Roffman, Ph.D. Michael Schonberg, Ph.D. Robert R. Sciacca, M.S. Larry D. Witte, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Ronald C. Adelman, M.D. Howard J. Barnum, M.D. Eli Bauman, M.D. Louis D. Carmichael, M.D. Rita A. Charon, M.D. Jorge Cortes-Quinones,

M.D. Ann P. D'Adamo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Arthur R. DeSimone, M.D. Gary Paul Forester, M.D. Stephen Lyle Gluck, M.D. Michael Goldman, M.D. Susan N. Greenberg, M.D. Lonnie B. Hanauer, M.D. Ralph Herz, Jr., M.D. Alexander A. Hindenberg,

M.D. Richard S. Kornbluth, M.D. Raymond Lippert, M.D. Pier Mancuso-Ungaro, M.D. Marcia Naveh, M.D. Eduardo R. Pons, Jr., M.D. Barry Lynn Raik, M.D. Susan Lee Rattner, M.D. Brian Scully, M.D. Elizabeth Shane, M.D. Jane S. Sillman, M.D. David B. Sutter, M.D. Sharon Wardlaw, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Helen-Ann Garcia, M.D. Joseph Heller, M.D. Gregory Klomp, M.D. John E. McWhorter, M.D. Milovan T. Rakic, M.D. Thomas J. Rakowski, M.D. John M. Rodgers, M.D. Richard H. Runser, M.D. Adele Tedeschi, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Joan Sobel, M.S. Margaret Willhite, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Bernadette Adams, B.S. Kenneth S. Bannerman, M.D.

ASSOCIATES (continued) John Thomas Barnard, M.D. Carlos Barreda, B.S. Charles L. Bisgaier, Ph.D. Zea Borek, M.B.Ch.B. Mary Dalecki, B.A. Michael Drillings, M.S. Doris Tse Eng, B.A. Sylvia H. Ford, M.A. Donald L. Gammon, B.S. Mary Ann Gawinowicz,

Ph.D. Michelle Greene, Ph.D. Anne Hurlet, M.D. Alan L. Kalischer, M.D. Kuniyo Kato, D.V.M. Michamasa Kato, Ph.D. Kallioppe S. LaGamma,

B.S. Westley H. Reeves, M.D. Maria Joao Saraiva, M.Sc. Yolene Thomas, M.D. Wesley R. Tzall, M.D. Dominique A. Weber,

L.esSc.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Henry Aranow, Jr., M.D. Hylan A. Bickerman, M.D. Andre F. Cournand, M.D. Albert R. Lamb, Jr., M.D. Hamilton Southworth, M.D. Alfred Steiner, M.D.

LECTURERS

Nicholas Christy, M.D. Edward E. Fischel, M.D. Eric S. Lichtenstein, M.D. William M. Manger, M.D. John H. McClement, M.D. Henry M. Thomas III, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

John S. Davis. B.A., Hamilton, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956

Walter Franck. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

Herbert J. Marx. B.E.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1960

MEDICINE 71

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Peter L. Arquin. M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1972

John F. D'Avella. B.A., Holy Cross (Massachusetts), 1968; M.D., Georgetown, 1972

Emery C. Herman. B.A., Emory, 1949; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1953

Gary S. Hoffman. B.A., Harpur, 1964; M.S., Howard, 1967; M.D., Medical College of

Virginia, 1971 Richard J. Horner. B.A., Dartmouth, 1966; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Peter J. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1971; M.D., CM., McGill, 1975 Alan J. Kozak. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., 1969 Don V. Lewis. B.A., North Carolina, 1967; M.D., 1971 John J. May. B.S., Notre Dame, 1969; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1973 Eric Michael Mazur. B.S.E., Princeton, 1971; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1975 Nancy Beth Merrell. B.S., Wayne State, 1970; Ph.D., 1972; M.D., 1976 Carolyn I. Mook. B.A., Smith, 1969; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1973 William H. Mook. B.A., Wesleyan, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944 David S. Pratt. B.A., New Hampshire, 1967; M.D., Tufts, 1971 Donald A. Raddatz. B.A., Holy Cross (Massachusetts), 1971; M.D., Minnesota, 1975 Allan G. Ramsay. B.A., Western Ontario, 1947; M.D., 1948 William H. Ramsay. B.A., Dartmouth, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Richard E. Reese. B.A., Dartmouth, 1965; M.D., Harvard, 1969 Dennis A. Savoie. B.A., Providence, 1967; M.D., Vermont, 1971 Robert S. Sioussat. B.A., Wesleyan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951 William Streck. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968; M.D., Missouri, 1973 David S. Svahn. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1965 David W. Vaules. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; B.M.S., 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1963 Gary Weaver. B.A., Goshen, 1964; M.D., Kansas, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professor

Donald O. Pollock. B.A., Hamilton, 1951; M.D., Harvard, 1955

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE Antoinette Kuzminski, M.A. Thomas M. Miller, M.D. Stephen E. Szebenyi, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professors

John Lindenbaum. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1959

Gerald E. Thomson (Samuel Lambert Professor). B.S., Queens (New York), 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959

Clinical Professors

Harold S. Ballard. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1948; M.D., Meharry, 1952 Kenneth Sterling. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

David Jocelyn Clain. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1959; M.D., 1968

Charles P. Felton. B.Sc, Xavier, 1949; M.D., Geneva, 1956

Clayton L. Natta. B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1957; M.D., Toronto, 1961

72 MEDICINE

Associate Clinical Professors

George C. Branche. B.A., Bowdoin, 1944; M.D., Boston, 1948

John B. Cromie. M.D., Belfast (Northern Ireland), 1949

William R. Cunnick, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Jeanne A. Smith. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957

Charles M. Yergan. B.S., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947

Assistant Professors

Ann M. Briscoe. M.A., Vassar, 1945; Ph.D., Yale, 1949 Thomas J. Garrett. M.D., Queen s (Ontario), 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Jay Brown. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968 Peter C.T. Dickinson. B.S., McQll, 1958; M.D., 1962

B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., Harvard 1972 B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 B.A., Syracuse, 1967; M.D.. Pennsylvania State, 1971 B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., Yale, 1973

Jay Franklin Dobkin. Donald A. Feinfeld. Kenneth J. Herwig. Wanda Devora Huff.

Hazeline Nurse. 1969

B.A., Hunter, 1965; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

Assistant Clinical Professors

James T. Chien. M.D., Yale-in-China Medical College, 1943 Marvin C. Cooper. B.S., Queens (New York), 1960; M.D., St. Louis, 1965 Milena L. Lewis. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Bruce David Logan. B.A., Colby, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Richard R. Prouty. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1948

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

John C. DiJohn, M.D. Pearl D. Foster, M.D. Paul Killian, M.D. Anthony J. Marano, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Viola Anderson, M.D. Alfred Robert Ashford, M.D. Jeffrey N. Bradshaw, M.D. Valentine J. Burroughs, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued)

Bennie W. Chiles, M.D. Carl A. Gamier, M.D. Major Geer, M.D. Michael H. Gordon, M.D. Ross T. Hamilton, M.D. Barbara J. Harmon, M.D. James H. Hubert, M.D. Herbert Knight, M.D. Thomas J. Mattimore, M.D. Shahab Momtazi, M.D. Clarence S. Murray, M.D. Luigi M.F. Negri, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued) Christopher J. Nickerson,

M.D. Ruth C. Onukwue, M.D. Velvie Ann Pogue, M.D. Jon Rothenberg, M.D. William J. Schwartz, M.D. Ear! J. Vanderbush, M.D. Michael D. Williams, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Douglas Miller, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER Cecil G. Marquez, M.D.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine

Robert Lindsay. M.P.C.B., Glasgow, 1968; Ph.D., 1969

MEDICINE 73

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine

Alberts. Klainer. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts, 1961

Assistant Clinical Professors

Robert V. McCormick. B.S., Harvard, 1944; M.D., 1946

Joseph Ryan. B.S., Notre Dame, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1970

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Kenneth Adler, M.D. Mark T. Atkins, M.D. Hillel Ben-Asher, M.D. Donald P. Burt, M.D. Joel E. Cannila, M.D. Alan Chanin, M.D. Bernard Davidoff, M.D. Barry Efros, M.D. Joseph F. Fennelly, M.D. Arthur Fisch, M.D. Arthur Geller, M.D. Lee W. Geller, M.D. Gary Gerstein, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Maurice E. Goldman, M.D. Stephen Guss, M.D. Arthur Hoaglund, M.D. Thomas R. Holland, M.D. Ibrahim Housri, M.D. Stephen Krasnica, M.D. Oscar R. Kruesi, M.D. David S. Lerman, M.D. Sudhir H. Mehta, M.D. Earl Nielson, M.D. Celso S. Puno, M.D. Martin L. Reich, M.D. Stephen W. Rozan, M.D. John Salaki, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Michael A. Samach, M.D. Felix Schletter, M.D. Zalman R. Schrader, M.D. Dean C. Shore, M.D. Leo H. Siegel, M.D. Lawrence Stein, M.D. James R. Sterrett, M.D. Jerrold M. Stock, M.D. John G. Valeri, M.D. Faith C. Walsh, M.D. Gary Weine, M.D. David Widman, M.D. Barry Zitomer, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professors

Michael Bernstein. M.D., New York Medical College, 1953

William F. Minogue. B.S., Seton Hall, 1951; M.S., New York Medical College, 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine

John J. Gregory. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1953; M.D. , Albany, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors (Family Practice)

Donald F. Kent. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1935; M.D., 1940 Richard N. Podell. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joel L. Duberstein. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Stephen J. Fischl. B.A., Seton Hall, 1963; M.D., College of Medicine and Dentistry of New

Jersey, 1967 Robert A. Fuhrman. B.A., Clark, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966 Mary T. Herald. B.A., New Rochelle, 1965; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1969 William A. Tansey III. B.A., Yale, 1966; M.D, Columbia, 1970 William N. Toth. B.S., Georgetown, 1956; M.D., Hahnemann, 1960 William E. Wagner, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1950

74 MEDICINE

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Peter Goodluck, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Kevin E. Bell, M.D. Donald J. Brock, M.D. H. Oliver Brown, Jr., M.D. Kopel Burk, M.D. Charles W. Clarke, Jr., M.D. Andrew Coronate, Jr., M.D. H. William Diefendorf, M.D. Charles E. Dooley, Jr., M.D. John T. Parry, M.D. Robert B. Francis, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued) Sidney E. Friedman, M.D. Harvey Gerhard, M.D. Samuel M. Gray, M.D. Thomas V. Inglesby, M.D. Robert P. Margie, M.D. Sanford M. Reiss, M.D. Melvin Rubinstein, M.D. R. Gregory Sachs, M.D. Robert R. Springer, M.D. Elliott M. Stein, M.D. Michael Suhl, M.D. Michael J. Tighe, M.D. Burton Tucker, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued) Richard M. Weinberg, M.D. David Allen Worth, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Joseph T. Faraldo, M.D. Eugene R. Kelly, M.D. Michael B. Kerner, M.D. A. Ralph Kristeller, M.D. David P. Miller, M.D. Lawrence J. Nastro, M.D. Robert D. Slama, M.D. Steven J. Stanzione, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors

A.L. Loomis Bell. B.S., Wesleyan, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947 John F. Bertles. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1952 Robert B. Case. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Peter R. Holt. B.Sc., Tolington, 1949; M.B., B.S.. London, 1954 Gerald B. Phillips. B.A., Princeton, 1946; M.D., Harvard 1948 William Rosner. B.A., Wisconsin, 1954; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1961 Theodore Van Itallie. B.S., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia. 1945 Harvey J. Weiss. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

William S. Clark. B.S., Dayton, 1934; M.D., St. Louis, 1938

Stanley Cortell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts, 1961

Michael H. Grieco. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1957 A. Gregory Jameson. B.A., Harvard, 1937; M.D., Columbia, 1950 Richard N. Pierson, Jr. B.A., Princeton. 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1966 Miles J. Schwartz. B.S., Queens (New York), 1947; M.D., New York University 1961

Clinical Professors

Albert W. Grokoest. B.S., Hamilton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943 Philip H. Henneman. B.A., Harvard 1943; M.D., 1946 Henry C. Shaffeld. B.A., Columbia, 1938; M.D., 1941

Associate Professor

F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer. B.A., Oberlin, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

C. Redington Barrett. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959 Robert S. Bernstein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., Harvard, 1965 Edward M. Dwyer. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

MEDICINE 75

Harvey G. Kemp. B.A., Oklahoma, 1955; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1959

Marianne J. Legato. B.A., Manhattanville, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1962

Alice Maniatis. M.D., Athens, 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard P. Ames. B.A., Williams, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Albert Attia. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.D., 1958

Norman A. Cagin. B.S., Rutgers, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

George Dermksian. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1954

James B. Gabriel. B.A., Brown, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1949

Jonas M. Goldstone. B.S., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Saul Kaplan. B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., Tennessee, 1959

Arthur Karanas. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1958 Richard McCray. B.A., Wesleyan, 1954; B.D., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Myron C. Patterson. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1943 Bruce H. Pinkernell. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1960; M.D., 1964 Norton S. Rosensweig. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 Lawrence Scharer. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958 Gerald Weintraub. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954 Myron C. Wright. B.A., Dartmouth, 1937; M.D., New York University, 1940 Herman Ziffer. B.A., Brooklyn, 1949; M.D., Chicago, 1953

Senior Research Associate

Beatrice M. Fairchild. B.A., Hunter, 1942; M.A., Bryn Mawr, 1943; Ph.D., 1948

Assistant Professors

Richard Collens. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; M.D., New York

University, 1966 Donald Philip Kotler. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973 Michelle P. Warren (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1961; M.D.,

Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Judith Axelrod. B.S., Wellesley, 1963; M.D., Cornell, 1967

Jeffrey M. Brensilver. M.D., Columbia, 1971

Airlee A.C. Cameron. B.A., Radcliffe, 1957; M.D., CM., McGill, 1961

Richard Gunnar Carlson. B.S., Trinity, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Edward W. Colt. M.D., University College Hospital (London), 1962

Michael Lange. M.D., Toronto, 1968

Gertrude Scott Lefavour. B.A., Gaucher, 1965; M.D., Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1970 Arthur J. Lennon. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Jonathan A. Lorch. B.A., Wisconsin, 1968; M.D., Tulane, 1972 Allen Mogtader. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1970 Robert C. Rinker. B.A., Antioch, 1965; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1969

Jean W. Saleh. B.A., St. Joseph (Beirut), 1957; M.D., Faculte Francaise de Medicin, 1964 Seiichi Shimomura. M.D., Okayama (Japan), 1945 William J. Vicic. B.S, Yale, 1966; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1970

76 MEDICINE

Assistant Clinical Professors

Charles G. Adsit, Jr. B.A.. Yale, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

Samir E. Alam. B.S., American (Beirut), 1968; M.D., 1972

Kenneth A. Altman. B.A., Cornell, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Wendy Aronson. B.A.. Vassar, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1968

William J. Athos. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1956 Harvey Benovitz. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Robert Bernot. B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Buffalo, 1960 Carlton Boxhill. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968 Earl B. Brown. B.S., Emory 1938; M.D., 1942 Donald P. Dallas. B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1954

Robert K. Emy. B.A., New York University. 1952; M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1957 James A. Feitman. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1944 Richard P. Fried. B.A., Brown, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968 Oscar Garfein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., 1965 Zane Gaut. B.S., Birmingham Southern, 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 Richard Geltman. B.A., Rutgers, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971 Henry M. Greenberg. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1968 Joseph A. Grossman. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1957 Katherine A. Hawkins. B.A., Manhattanville. 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973 Julian B. Hyman. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1947 John H. Keating. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1943 Annetta J. Kimball. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1968 Ronald Kraft. B.S, Michigan, 1966; M.D., Cincinnati, 1970 Edith Joan Langner. B.A.. Michigan, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1969 Athanasius Mallios. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1973 David K. Meriney. B.A., Duke, 1956; M.D., 1960 Lawson A. Moyer 111. B.A., Virginia, 1968; M.D., 1972 William M. Nicholas. B.A., Williams, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Syracuse),

1954 John J. Olichney. B.S., Rutgers, 1965; M.D., Albany 1969 Edward H. Reisner. B.A., Columbia, 1935; M.D., 1939 Robert B. Roven. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957 Eugene Santilli. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1958; M.D., Medical University of

Bologna, 1964 Morton Schwimmer. B.A., Lafayette (Pennsylvania), 1948; M.D., Jefferson, 1951 Kenneth N. Weinstein. B.A., Vermont, 1955; M.D., New York University, 1959

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES (continued) ASSOCIATES (continued)

MEDICINE Eugene Freundlich, M.D. Anthony J. Pepe, M.D.

Jose L. Barbosa-Saldivar, Francis G. Geer, M.D. Mark V. Sherrid, M.D.

M.D. Maurice F. Goodbody, M.D. Nicholas Steiner, M.D.

John Thomas Cappadona, Carolyn E. Goodstein, M.D. Thomas Tamlyn, M.D.

M.D. Barry E. Goozner, M.D.

David Stewart Carroll, M.D. Antoine C. Harovas, M.D.

Paul Chrzanowski, M.D. William S. Hopewell, M.D. Mukul Kumar Basu, Ph.D.

Albert Cohen, M.D. Michael Robinson Irwin, Thalia Boussios, Ph.D.

John Cornwall, M.D. M.D. M. Saeed Khan, Ph.D.

James Ducey, M.D. Herbert Ivan Jernow, M.D. Bruce R. Lages, M.D.

Donald R. Fishman, M.D. Robert P. Lombardo, M.D. Mohan Muthireval Reddy,

Martin Jay Frankel, M.D. Thomas M. Nail, M.D. Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

MEDICINE MICROBIOLOGY 77

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Eric Andreae, M.D. Vernon G. Baker, M.D. Lestrino C. Baquiran, M.D. Michael S. Baum, M.D, Cecil B. Broderick, M.D. John Cohn, M.D. Hugh C. Davidson, M.D. Margaret Dessau, M.D. Rosina B. Dixon, M.D. Jerome Paul Ehrlich, M.D. Jeanne Fastook, M.D. James W. Fingerhut, M.D. Stuart W. Forster, M.D. Dennis Gage, M.D. Dulaney Glen, M.D. Sheila Joy Herscovitch,

M.D. Karl R. Hofmann, M.D.

Microbiology

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Peter L. Hofmann, M.D. Wade A. Johnson, M.D. Mitchell Kahn, M.D. Martin Philip Kasofsky,

M.D. Alfred Miller, M.D. Thomas C. Moore III, M.D. Lazare Novack, M.D. Norman C. Peeler, M.D. Martin Saul Pine, M.D. Ernest C. Richards, M.D. Thomas D. Robinson, M.D. Harry A. Roselle, M.D. Nicholas J. Rummo, M.D. Clyde N. Schechter, M.D. Howard N. Schwartz, M.D. Thomas V. Tupper, M.D. Daniel C. Williams, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Dennis George Huskins,

M.D. Robert Stanley Karol, M.D. Vineet Mehta, M.B.B.S. Richard R. Neufield, M.D. Mary E. O'Brien, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Hisham F. Nakshbendi, B.S. Katherine P. Porikos, Ph.D. Jack Wang, M.S. Mei-Uih Yang, M.D.

LECTURERS

Marcelle Lavau, Ph.D.

David Schwimmer, M.D.

John E. Borne Professor and Chairman

Harold S. Ginsberg. B. A., Duke, 1937; M.D., Tulane, 1941

Professors

Paul D. Ellner (also Pathology). B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.D., Southern California, 1952;

Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 Bernard F. Erlanger. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.A., New York

University, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1951 Gabriel S. Godman (also Pathology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Elvin A. Kabat (also Human Genetics) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Wladsylaw Manski (in Ophthalmology). M.Phil., Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw. 1951 Benvenuto Pernis (also Medicine). M.D., Milan, 1947 Henry J. Vogel (in Pathology). B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University 1941

Professor of Oral Biology

Solon A. Ellison. B.S, Columbia, 1942; D.D.S., 1946; Ph.D., 1958 Adjunct Professors

Dean L. Engelhardt. B.S., Amherst, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1967 Louis H. Muschel. B.S., New York University, 1936; M.A., Columbia, 1938; M.S., Yale. 1951; Ph.D., 1953

Associate Professors

Philip D. Alesandro (also Public Health). B.S., Rutgers, 1952; M.S., 1954; Ph.D., Chicago,

1958 Sherie L. Morrison. B.A., Stanford 1963; Ph.D., 1966 Saul J. Silverstein. B.S., Cornell, 1968; Ph.D., Florida, 1971

78 MICROBIOLOGY

Adjunct Associate Professor

Victor Bokkenheuser. M.D., Copenhagen, 1945

Senior Research Associates

Paul B. Fisher. B.A., Hunter, 1968; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974 Charles S.H. Young. B.A., Oxford, 1966; D.Phil., 1969

Assistant Professors

Andrei Augustin. M.A., Bucharest (Rumania), 1969

Vincent Bonagura (also Pediatrics). B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975

William Cleveland. B.S., Columbia, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1975

David H. Figurski. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1969; Ph.D., Rochester, 1974

M. Suzanne Holmes Giannini (also Public Health). B.A., New York University, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974

Alexander D. Goldfarb. Diploma, Moscow State University, 1969; Ph.D., Weizmann Insti- tute (Israel), 1980

Ramareddy V. Guntaka. B.S., Andhra (India), 1963; M.Sc, Agra (India), 1965; Ph.D., Kansas, 1970

David S. Hodes (also Pediatrics). B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Christine A. Milcarek. B.S., Duquesne, 1968; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1972

Vincent Racaniello. B.A., Cornell, 1974; Ph.D., Mount Sinai, 1979

Howard Shuman. B.S., Massachusetts, 1974; Ph.D., Harvard, 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Yvonne A. Lue. Ph.D., Columbia, 1976

Harley Y. Tse. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1972; Ph.D., California (San Diego), 1977

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Norbert H. Wasserman, Eng.Sc.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Louis A. Goode, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Harriet Castleman, B.S. Shi M. Chen, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued) Leila Fisher, Ph.D. Liu Gen-Qi, M.D., Ph.D. Paul M. Kalados, Ph.D. Ulla Lindholm-Beauchamp,

Ph.D. Judyta Praszkier, Ph.D. Arepalli S. Rao, Ph.D. Santosh K. Sikder, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES [continued) Gek-kee Sim, Ph.D. Giampaolo Tonda

SPECIAL LECTURERS Charles L. Fox, Jr., M.D. Konrad C. Hsu, M.D. Beatrice C. Seegal, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Pathology

Angus C. Sampath. D.Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Professor

George A. Hashim (in Surgery). Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY 79

Neurological Surgery

Byron Stookey Professor and Chairman

Bennett M. Stein. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., McGill, 1955

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

James W. Correll. B.A., Brown, 1941; M.D., Cornell, 1944 Edgar M. Housepian. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953

Associate Professors

Joao Lubo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon, 1968

Kalmon Post. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York University, 1967

Associate Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Peter W. Carmel. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960 James G. McMurtry III. B.A., Rice, 1953; M.D., Baylor, 1957 W. Jost Michelson. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Assistant Professor

Donald Oliver Quest. B.S., Illinois, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Ronald Brisman. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

George L. Becker. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1950; M.D., Hahnemann, 1954 Harvey R. Nova. B.A., Brooklyn, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY David A. Kvam, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert W. Mackie. M.D., Long Island Medical College, 1 944

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY Bruce Stephen Harris, M.D.

80 NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY NEUROLOGY

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

James E.O. Hughes. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

Robert W. Schick (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY George V. DiGiacinto, M.D.

Neurology

Henry and Lucy Moses Professor and Chairman

Lewis P. Rowland. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1948

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Darryl C. DeVivo (Sidney Carter Professor) (also Pediatrics). B.A., Amherst, 1959; M.D.,

Virginia, 1964 Salvatore DiMauro. M.D., Padova (Italy), 1963 Stanley Fahn (H. Houston Merritt Professor). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1955; M.D.,

California (San Francisco), 1 958 Arthur Karlin (also Biochennistry). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Robert E. Lovelace. B.S., London, 1953; M.D., 1957 Audrey S. Penn. B.A., Swarthmore, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 James H. Schwartz (also Physiology) (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.A.,

Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York University 1959; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1964 Earl A. Zimmerman. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1963

Professor of Microbiology and of Human Genetics and Development

Elvin A. Rabat. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937

Professor of Physiology

John P. Reuben. B.A., Grinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D., Florida, 1959

Professors of Clinical Neurology

Abe Chutorian (also Pediatrics). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; M.A., 1950; B.S., 1952; M.D.,

1957 Arnold Gold (also Pediatrics). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Lausanne,

1950 Eli S. Goldensohn (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., George Washington, 1937; M.D., 1940 James F. Hammill. B.S., LaSalle, 1947; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1948 Niels L. Low (also Pediatrics). M.D., South Carolina, 1940 Daniel Sciarra. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943

NEUROLOGY 81

Associate Professors

Lucien J. Cote (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S.. Vermont, 1951; M.D.. 1954 Claude P.J. Ghez (also Physiology). B.Sc. Geneva. I960: M.D.. Harvard, 1964 William Allen Hauser (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A.. Western Reserve. 1958; M.D., St.

Louis, 1962 Timothy A. Pedley. B.A., Pomona. 1965; M.D.. Yale. 1969

Associate Professor of Neurochemistry

Hai Won Chang. Ph.D.. Columbia. 1961

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology

C. Dominique Toran-Allerand (in International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduc- tion). B.A.. Smith. 1955; M.D.. Albany Medical College. 1959

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert E. Barrett. B.A.. William and Mary. 1953; M.D.. Medical College of Virginia. 1957

Robert A. deNapoli. M.D.. Harvard. 1954

Linda D. Lewis. B.S.. Bethany. 1961; M.D.. West Virginia. 1965

Joseph L. O'Brien. M.D.. Cornell, 1950

Senior Research Associate

George M. Katz. B.E.E.. College of the City of New York. 1942

Assistant Professors

Gary Abrams. B.A.. State University of New York (Buffalo). 1970; M.D.. Pittsburgh. 1974

Arnold Eggers. B.A.. Columbia. 1967; M.D.. 1971

Daniel J. Goldberg (also Pharmacology). Ph.D.. Yale. 1974

William G. Johnson. B.A.. Princeton. 1963; M.D.. Columbia. 1967

Masataka Kawai. Ph.D.. Princeton. 1971

Norman Latov. B.A., Columbia. 1970; M.D.. Pennsylvania. 1975; Ph.D.. 1975

William A. Maltese. B.S.. St. Francis (New York). 1972; Ph.D.. Syracuse. 1977

Gajanan Nilaver. P.U.C. Madras (India). 1963; M.B.B.S.. 1968

Martha M. Sorenson. B.A.. Oberlin. 1963; M.S.. Washington (Seattle). 1967; Ph.D.. 1969

Stephen Shafer (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A.. Harvard. 1966; M.D..

Columbia. 1970 Joseph H. WiUner. B.A., Hamilton, 1966; M.D.. New York University, 1970

Assistant Professors of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Halina Den. B.S.. Frankfort (Germany). 1949; M.S.. New York University 1954; Ph.D..

Michigan. 1958 Abraham B. Eastwood. B.S.. Muhlenberg. 1965; M.S.. Lehigh, 1967; Ph.D.. 1971

Assistant Professor of Neurobiology

Eli Shapiro. B.S. Columbia. 1970; M.Phil.. Yale. 1972; Ph.D.. 1976

82 NEUROLOGY

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Michael Fetell. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972 Theodore A. List. B.A., Kalamazoo, 1963; M.D., Michigan, 1967 Richard Mayeux. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968; M.D., 1972 Robert C. Michener. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1968; M.D., 1972 James R. Miller. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Marcelo Olarte. B.S, Marist Brothers, 1962; M.D., Cuyo, 1970 Stanley R. Resor, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Sidney Starkman. B.A., Brooklyn, 1966; M.D., Georgetown, 1970 Albert J. Tahmoush. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.S., Washington, 1965; M.D., Tufts, 1967 Roger Traub. B.A., Princeton, 1967; Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1972

Assistant Clinical Professors

Robert A. Esser. B.S., Loyola, 1941; M.D., Northwestern, 1945

Eugenia E. Gamboa. B.A., Philippines, 1961; M.D., 1966

Mark W. Green. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1971; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Stanley W. Holstein. B.S., George Washington, 1963; M.D., Georgetown, 1967

Charles R. Plank. B.A., Oklahoma, 1961; M.D., 1965

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Sidney M. Cohen, M.D. James F. Culleton, M.D. Ronald G. Emerson, M.D. Stanley Lesse, M.D. Bruce Roseman, M.D. Robert Wolf, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Ernest Amatniek, Ph.D. Vinayak Damle, Ph.D. Paul Oratofsky, B.A. Guy Valiquette, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Louise Donahoe, M.D. Damon N. Fellman, M.D. Gerald J. Smallberg, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY

Stephen C. Klass, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Mary Chou Chen, M.S. H. Ryan Wagner, Ph.D. Leonard Zablow, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Ernest Bock, M.A. Robert D. Hawkins, Ph.D. Peter Lau, M.A. Angel Mozo, Ph.D. John Paige, Ph.D. Alfred M. Salazar, Jr.,

Ph.D. Haruhide Yumiya, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Sara Ginsburg, Ph.D. Harry Grundfest, Ph.D. Richard L. Masland, M.D. Carmine T. Vicale, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER IN BIOCHEMISTRY

David Nachmansohn, M.D.

LECTURERS

Robert E. McMasters, M.D.

Jeffrey Joel Rosen, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor

William Amols. B.A., New York University, 1938; M.D., 1942

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lewis L. Hamilton. B.S., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

NEUROLOGY OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 83

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Neurology

John C. M. Brust, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Alfred C. Bannerman. B.Sc, Edinburgh, 1963; M.B., Ch.B., 1966 Edward B. Healton. B.S., Oregon, 1964; M.D., Creighton

Assistant Clinical Professor

Bertel Bruun. M.D., Copenhagen, 1964

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Rafael Borras, M.D. Willidm P. Duggan, M.D. Renee Malouf, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Carl W. Braun. B.A., Harvard 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

Assistant Clinical Professors

Sidney E. Bender. M.D.. Toronto, 1962

Neil Lombard! (also Pediatrics). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967

Kuldup K. Sachdev. B.S., Agre (India), 1957; M.D.. Punjab, 1962

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

NEUROLOGY NEUROLOGY

Ann Geller, M.D. Daniel A. Alkaitis, M.D.

Donald G. Rawlinson, M.D.

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Willard C. Rappleye Professor and Chairman

Raymond L. Vande Wiele (Director, International Institute for Study of Human Reproduc- tion). M.D., Louvain, 1947

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Miecyslaw Finster (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland), 1941; M.D., Geneva.

1957 Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (also Human Genetics). B.A.. Boston. 1949;

M.D., Tufts. 1955 L. Stanley James (also Pediatrics). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948

84 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Orlando J. Miller (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950 Allan G. Rosenfield (also Public Health) (Director, Center for Population and Family Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Professor of Biochemistry

Seymour Lieberman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois, 1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941

Professor of Reproductive Biochemistry

Ines Mandl . Ph. D. , Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1 949

Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Henry Clay Frick II. M.D., Columbia, 1944

W. Duane Todd. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Associate Professor

Roy H. Petrie. B.S., Western Kentucky, 1961; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1965

Associate Professor of Physiology

Michel Ferin. M.D., Louvain, 1964

Associate Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Bruce A. Barron. B.A., Allegheny, 1955; Ph.D., Yale, 1965; M.D., New York University,

1971 Edward T. Bowe. B.S., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961 Harold E. Fox (also Pediatrics). M.Sc, Rochester and Oxford, 1972 Wylie C. Hembree 111 (also Medicine). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1964 RaphaelJewelewicz. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Vincent J. Freda. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York University, 1952 Raymond M. McCaffrey. B.A., Fordham, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958 David B. Moore. B.S., Hamilton, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944 Ming-Neng Yeh. M.D., National Taiwan, 1964

Senior Research Associate

Inge Deyrenfurth. B.S., Wilhelm, 1942; M.Sc, Strasbourg, 1944; B.Sc, Heidelberg, 1947

Assistant Professors

Laxmi Baxi. M.D., Seth G.S. Medical College (Bombay). 1962

Phyllis C. Leppert (also Pediatrics). M.S., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Yale, 1976

Jen-Ta Shen. M.D., National Taiwan, 1970; Ph.D., California, 1975

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Deborah Jean Hales (in the Center for Population and Family Health). B.A.. California (Berkeley), 1973; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1977

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 85

Nabil Wafik Husami. B.S., M.D., American (Beirut), 1972

John Milton Hutson. B.S., Alabam, 1972; M.D., 1975

Richard U. Levine. B.S., Tufts, 1962; M.D., Cornell, 1966

Kevin B. Reilly. B.S., Fairfield (Connecticut), 1965; M.D., Michigan, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professor

Wolfgang Tretter. M.D., Heidelberg, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Andrew L. Loucopoulos,

M.D. Elynne B. Margulis, M.D. Lawrence J. Severino, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Lajos Bandy, M.S. Marian J. Evinger, Ph.D. Norma J. Greenfield, Ph.D. Hosea Fu-Shih Huang,

Ph.D. Henry R. Rey, M.S.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Laura Ponticorvo, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Sylvia P. Rubin, M.Sc.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Ina N. Cholst, M.D. Steven G. Kaali, M.D. Henry A. Sellner, M.D. Barbara E. Shortell, M.D. Steven Swersky, M.D. Pamela J. Tropper, M.D. Leonardo J. Yunis, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Margarita M. Hawkins, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Ching H. Chen, Ph.D. Veeramac Prasad, Ph.D. Dean Van Vugt, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Equinn Munnell, M.D. Gilbert J. Vosburgh, M.D.

LECTURERS

Richard A. Bronson, M.D. Jerome A. Dolan, M.D. Arnold N. Fenton, M.D. John L. Lewis, Jr., M.D. Kevin D. Reilly, M.D. David L. Rosenfeld, M.D. Sidney J. Siegel, M.D. Anna L. Southam, M.D. Christopher Tietze, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Douglas H. Barns. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954 Balazs Selendy. M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1964

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Mark E. Heller, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Solan Chao. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Associate Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Hiroko T . Felton . M.D., Kansai (Japan), 1 955

Jack E. Maidman. B.S., California (San Francisco), 1958: M.D., 1962

86 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Associate Clinical Professor

Stephen L. Matseoane. B.S., Fort Hare (South Africa), 1954; M.D., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1959

Assistant Professor

Keith L. Rawlinson. B.S., M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1966

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Sunthorn Bunyaviroch. B.S., Chulalongkorn (Thailand), I960; M.D., Siriraj Hospital, 1964

Young Sook Cho. M.B., Yonsei, 1955; M.D., 1959

Nomenida A. Lazaro. B.S., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1960; M.D., 1965

Meredith F. Sirmans. B.S., Lincoln, 1961; M.D., Meharry, 1965

Esther S. Suarez. A.A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1955; M.D., 1960

Alfred J. Williams. B.A., Howard, 1960; M.D., Meharry, 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Vicki Ann Alexander. B.S., California (Riverside), 1963; M.D., California (San Francisco),

1974 Pisan Unchalipongse. M.D., Chiengma Medical School (Thailand), 1965

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Sitaram Vithal Chitnis, M.D. Hasi Das, M.D. Machelle Alma Harris, M.D. Ashalatha Mital, M.B., B.S. Thomas Murray, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS [continued]

Rajasingham Rahulatharan, M.D. Peter Wright III, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Angela Portale, M.S.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Abraham Risk. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1957; M.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1969

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor

Robert S. Neuwirth (F. Huntington and Dorothy Babcock Professor). B.S., Yale, 1955; M.D., 1958

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Harold M.M. Tovell. B.A., Toronto, 1951; M.D., 1955

Associate Clinical Professors

Hussein K. Amin. M.B., Ch.B., Alexandria (Egypt), 1955 John F. Dwyer. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 87

Assistant Professor

Michelle P. Warren (also Medicine). B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professor of Endocrine Biochemistry

Richard B. Hochberg. Ph.D., Hahnemann, 1967

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Ernst G. Bartsich. M.D., Frankfort, 1962

Terusada Horiguchi. M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1961

Hamid Mootabar. M.D., Pahlavi (Iran), 1966; M.P.H., Columbia. 1974

Haldar H. Shamsi. M.B.B.S., King Edward Medical College (Pakistan), 1 965

Ivan K. Strausz. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alexander Coman. M.D., Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania). 1948

David B. Crawford. B.S., North Carolina, 1943; M.D.. New York University. 1946

Emmanuel M. Greenberg. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1941

Ivan J. Jacobson. B.A., Belgrade (Yugoslavia), 1948; M.D., 1955

Gyula Nemes. B.A., Gymn.Szekesfehervar, 1946; M.D.. Budapest, 1954

Ian G. Van Praagh. M.D., Toronto, 1955

Marcia L. Storch. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1955; M.D., Woman s Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1973 Riley W. Waller. B.S., LeMoyne, 1943; M.D., Howard 1947

Senior Research Associate

Muriel Feigelson. Ph.D., New York University, 1961

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Farshad Agahi, M.D. Terry L. Andrews, M.D. Felipe Bozzo, M.D. Kok Chung Chang, M.D. Gerard de Catalogne, M.D. Frederick Clare, M.D. Paul S. Colcher, M.D. Satwant Kaur Dhamoon,

M.R.C.O.G. Balinas Espinosa, M.D. Rauf G. Faroqui, M.B., B.S. Paul Filipescu, M.D. Henry Freuman, M.D. Nargess A. Hakimi-Fard,

M.D. John Jakus, M.D. Jay Joel Kelinson, M.D. E. Nicholas Klein, M.D. Gary M. Levine, M.D. Leon Lewenstein, M.D. Peter S. Maran, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Monica Claudette Martin,

M.D. Ezatolah Mohajer-Shojai,

M.D. Alam Morris, M.D. Adamandia

Panayotopoulos, M.D. Benu Pascariu, M.D. Humberto Portillo, M.D. Meera Prabat, M.B.B.S. George S. Radney, M.D. Raphael Reiss, M.D. Ronald J. Reiss, M.D. Irving Ward Robinson,

M.D. Arnold Roufa, M.D. Peter S. Sailon, M.D. Bruce M. Schiffman, M.D. Istvan Paul Tornai, M.D. Filippo Vita, M.D. Olwen Joy Wellington,

M.B., B.S. Mary E. Wilson, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Malca Sane, M.D.

LECTURERS

Naif K. Basile, M.D.

Charles H. Debrovner,

M.D. Michael Harel, M.D. Roger Hassid, M.D. Andre Nehorayoff, M.D. Robert M. Podell, M.D. Richard A. Ruskin, M.D. Fouad Surur, M.B.B.Ch. Alois Vasicka, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Bernardo Handszer, M.D. Daniel A. Tsin, M.D.

88 OPHTHALMOLOGY

Ophthalmology

Edward S. Harkness Professor and Chairman

Charles J. Campbell. M.D., George Washington, 1948; B.S., Muskingum, 1949; M.S., Rochester, 1951; Med Sc.D., Columbia, 1957

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Endre A. Balazs (Malcolm P. Aldrich Professor). M.D., Budapest, 1942 Peter Gouras. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professor of Ocular Physiology

Laszlo Z. Bito. B.A., Bard, 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1963

Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

Abraham Spector. Ph.D., New York University, 1957

Professor of Microbiology

Wladyslaw Manski. M.Phil, Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw (Poland), 1951

Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Harold F. Spalter. B.A., Brown, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Clinical Professor

Anthony Donn. B.S., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Associate Professor of Physiology

Jorge Fischbarg. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago, 1971

Associate Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Myles M. Behrens. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Richard W. Darrell. B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959; Sc.D, Columbia, 1965 Andrew deRoetth, Jr. B.S., Northwestern, 1943; M.D., 1946 R. Linsy Farris. M.D., Duke, 1961 Max Forbes. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Chicago, 1957 Francis A. L'Esperance, Jr. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Sally Moore (Orthoptics). B.S., Delaware, 1952 Balachandran D. Srinivasan. Ph.D., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1967

Stephen Trokel. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1959; Med. Sc.D., Columbia, 1965

Associate Clinical Professors

William J. Cooper. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 John W. Espy. 5.5., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956

OPHTHALMOLOGY 89

Frank B. Hoefle. B.A., Dartmouth, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1961 George M. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Albany, 1959

Senior Research Associate

Debdutta Roy. B.Sc, Calcutta, 1959; M.Sc, 1961; D.Phil, 1966

Assistant Professor of Biophysical Ophthalmology

Charles J. Koester. B.S., Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1950; Ph.D., Rochester, 1955

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

James P. Dillon. B.S., Canisious College, 1964; M.S., Columbia, 1973; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Pharmacology

Prasad S. Kulkarni. B.S., Shivaji (India), 1965; M.S., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S., Miami, 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Arnold W. Forrest. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., New York University, 1942 Emil Wirostko. B.S., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960; Sc.D., Columbia, 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Hugh M. Moss. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1954 Ellen F. Regan. B.A., Wellesley, 1940; M.D., Yale, 1943

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Howard M. Eggers, M.D. Albert J. Hofeldt, M.D. William A. James, Jr., M.D. Rainer N. Mittl, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES E. Anita Anderson Ethel I. Anderson, Ph.D. Gerard Armand, Ph.D. Mary K. Cowman, Ph.D. Mary T. Flood, B.S. Margaret H. Garner, Ph.D. William H. Garner, Ph.D. James E. Haley, Ph.D. Lu-Ku-Li, Ph.D. Jong J. Lim, Ph.D. Kasimierz Malinowski, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Martin L. Leib, M.D. Lawrence G. Pape, M.D. Louis D. Pizzarello, M.D. Jaime Santamaria III, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Richard D. Banyard, M.D. Lisa G. Barbera, M.D. Donald H. Green, M.D. Richard G. Lennon, M.D. Cynthia Mackay, M.D. Lance D. Redler, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Suraj Prkash Bhat, Ph.D. Heinz Rosskothen Charles Weiss, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Janet L. Denlinger, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Frank D. Caroll, M.D. George R. Merriam, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURES IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Zacharias Dische, M.D. Karl Meyer, M.D.

LECTURERS

Frederic H. Deutsch, Ph.D. Frank Di Benedetto, Ph.D. Hampson S. Sisler, Ph.D. Mark D. Stern, M.D. Julius A. Vida, Ph.D.

90 OPHTHALMOLOGY ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Thomas A. Farell. B.A., Hamilton, 1957; M.D., McGill, 1961

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY Charles B. Deichman, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Herman C. Jordan. B.A., Colgate, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1964

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Rajendra K. Bansal, M.B., B.S. Antonio M. Gonzalez, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) John P. Mitchell, M.D. Ram P. Tiwari, M.S.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professor

James C. Newton. B.S., Fordham, 1949; Ph.D., 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

John Eden, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Louis V. Angioletti, Jr.,

M.D. Chin Wing Chu, M.D. Bernard J. Fowler, M.D. Charles Merker, M.D. Chalempong Sarakhun,

M.D. Howard K. Weisberg, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

Ulises Arango, M.D. Philip A. Bonanno, M.D. Robert C. Delia Rocca,

M.D. Bruce M. Hyman, M.D. Richard S. Kochman, M.D. Thomas O. Muldoon, M.D. Robert P. Newhouse, M.D.

ASSISTANTS (continued)

D. Paul Satya, M.B., B.S.

Morton H. Seelenfreund,

M.D. George Traykovski, M.D. Joseph Wynn Wesley, M.D.

LECTURERS

Dennis Freilich, M.D.

Edward L. Raab, M.D.

Orthopedic Surgery

Frank Stinchfield Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery and Chairman

Alexander Garcia. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1943

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

C. Andrew L. Bassett. M.D., Columbia, 1948; Med.Sc.D., 1955

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY 91

Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Harold M. Dick. B.A., Princeton, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

S. Ashby Grantham. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1952; M.D., 1955

Charles S. Neer II. B.A., Dartmouth, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1942

Charles T. Ryder. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1939; M.D., Harvard, 1943

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Austin D. Johnson. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

Associate Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Stephen Bruce Doty. B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George B. Ambrose. B.A., Columbia, 1940; M.D.. 1943 Nas S. Eftekhar. M.D., Teheran, 1960

Hugo A. Keim. B.S., St. Mary's (Minnesota), 1956; M.S., Northwestern, 1966; M.D., Loyola. 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

David L. Andrews. B.A., Williams, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

John R. Denton. B.S., U.S. Military Academy, 1960; M.D., Medical College of Alabama,

1967 Rosamond Kane. M.D., Columbia, 1952

Assistant Clinical Professors

Robert M. Reiss. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., 1959

James N. Worcester, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Assistant Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Howard A. Kiernan, Jr. B.S. Holy Cross, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966 Christopher B. Michelson. B.A., Bowdoin, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Assistant Professor of Orthopedic Biomechanics

Robert W. Pawluk. B.S, Columbia, 1974; M.B.A., 1977

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Louis U. Bigliani, M.D. Peter N. Carbonara, M.D. William U. Cavallaro, M.D. Robert N. Dunn, M.D. Merle H. Katzman, M.D. Harvey Orlin, M.D. Thomas D. Rodda, M.D. Joseph E. Salvatore, M.D. William A. Sinton, M.D. L. Arne Skilbred, M.D. David M. Smith, M.D.

ASSOCIATES {continued)

Martin L. Sorger, M.D. Joel D. Weinstein, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Steven Berkowitz, M.D. Michael J. Bronson, M.D. Stuart J. Fischer, M.D. Richard E. Fleming, Jr.,

M.D. Lawrence A. Lefkowitz,

M.D. Stephen J. Mcllveen, M.D. David Price Roye, Jr., M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

E. Baldwin Self, Jr., M.D. Harvey S. Sicherman, M.D. Ronald Tietjen, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE George Tzitzikalakis, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATE Sharon M. Mitchell, B.S.

SPECIAL LECTURER Frank Stinchfield, M.D.

92 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Marvin L. Shelton. B.S., Howard, 1951; M.D., 1956

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS [continued]

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Qalgj^ p Medley, Jr., M.D. (in Surgery)

Aaron M. Gold, M.D. John B. Nailor, M.D. (in Surgery)

Germuckh S. Walha, M.D. (in Surgery) INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

William L. King, M.D. (in Surgery)

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George Van B. Cochran. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1956; Med.Sc.D., 1957 Alice L. Garrett. B.S.. Washington State, 1944; M.D.. Southern California, 1954

Associate Clinical Professor

Raphael K. Levine, B.A.. Brandeis, 1961; M.D.. Jefferson. 1965

Assistant Clinical Professor

Edward B. Leahey. B.A.. Fordham, 1941; M.D., Georgetown. 1944

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Robert L. Boothe, M.D. Abraham S. Kovarsky, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Joseph W. Fielding. M.D., Toronto, 1946

Clinical Professor

Robert E. Zickel. B.A.. Cornell, 1952; M.D., 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Vincent J. Fietti, Jr. B.A., Boston, 1968; M.D., 1972 Frederic E. Helbig. B.A., Brown. 1964; M.D., Boston, 1969 Tarek Hisham Mardam-Bey. M.D.. American (Beirut). 1972 Ronald M. Match. B.A., Hofstra, 1953; M.D.. Jefferson. 1957 Andrew H. Patterson. B.A., North Carolina, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958 George L. Unis. B.A., New York University, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry. 1975

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY OTOLARYNGOLOGY 93

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

William G. Hamilton, M.D. Richard J. Cea, M.D.

James C. Parkes II, M.D. John F. Crowe, M.D. (in Surgery)

Sanford A. Ratzan, M.D. Luther F. Warren, M.D. George J. Zambetti, M.D.

Otolaryngology

Professor and Chairman

Maxwell Abramson. B.A., Wesleyan, 1957; M.D., Union (Albany), 1961

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Juergen Tondorff. M.D.. Kiel (Germany), 1938: Ph.D. Heidelberg. 1945

Professors of Clinical Otolaryngology

Robert M. Hui. B.A.. Southern California. 1943: M.D.. 1946

Robin M. Rankow. B.S.. College of the City of New York, 1935: D.D.S., Columbia. 1940: M.D., Rochester. 1951

Professor of Clinical Audiology and Speech Pathology

Thomas H. Fay. B.A.. Florida, 1949: M.A.. Columbia. 1950: Ph.D.. Illinois. 1958

Associate Professor

Andrew Blitzer (also Oral Surgery). B.A.. Adelphi. 1966: D.D.S.. Columbia. 1970: M.D.. Mt. Sinai School of Medicine (New York). 1973

Associate Professor of Auditory Biophysics

Shyam K. Khanna. B.Sc. Lucknow (India). 1951: D.R.E., St. Xaviers (Bombay), 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Frank D. Mignona. B.A.. Princeton. 1961: M.D.. New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1965 Lawrence Savetsky. B.A.. New York University. 1951: M.D.. State University of New York

(Downstate), 1955 Malcolm H. Schvey. B.A.. Lehigh. 1947: M.A.. Columbia. 1950; M.D., Amsterdam, 1956

Associate Professor of Clinical Dentistry

Steven Roser (in Surgery). B.A.. Middlebury 1955: D.M.D.. Harvard. 1968: M.D.. 1972

Assistant Professor of Biochemical Otolaryngology

Cheng Chun Huang. B.S, Taiwan, 1963; M.S., Vanderbilt. 1966: Ph.D., Iowa, 1970

94 OTOLARYNGOLOGY PATHOLOGY

Assistant Professors of Clinical Otolaryngology

Soly Baredes. B.A., Columbia, 1972; M.D., 1976

Anthony Frederick Jahn. B.Sc, Toronto, 1969; M.Sc, 1970; M.D., 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

John D. Piro (also Prosthodontics). B.A., Fordham, 1943; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946 Raymond B. Strauss. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1950; Ph.D., Florida, 1956; M.D., Western Reserve, 1968

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY

Vincent G. Caruso, M.D. Arthur B. Lacher, M.D. Richard S. Mega, M.D. Daniel J. Pender, M.D. Nicholas D. Pontilena, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) William R. Richtmeier, M.D. Peter D. Westerhoff, M.D. Melvin Wiederkehr, M.D. Howard D. Zipper, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Hiroshi Moriyama, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Michael Berreby, M.D. Svetlana Kaufman, M.D. Halit Pastaci, Ph.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Errol A. Thompson. M.B., University College (Dublin), 1936

Assistant Professor

Lee David Eisenberg (in Surgery). B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Clinical Professor

Ransford C. Newman. M.B., B.S., London, 1960; F.R.C.S., Edinburgh, 1968

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professors

John S. Lewis. M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1953

Stanley Whitfield. Certificate, Harris Academy (Dundee), 1940; M.B.,Ch.B., St. Andrew's University Medical School, 1946

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Maria Aramburu, M.D. Neville W. Carmical, M.D. James F. Grillo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY

Awny Aziz Abdou, M.B.,

Ch.B Arshad H. Amjad, M.D.

Pathology

Francis Delafield Professor and Chairman

Donald W. King. M.D., Syracuse, 1949

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Tay Bong Lee, M.D. Pi-Tang Lin, M.D. Mauriciu Rodescu, M.D.

PATHOLOGY 95

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Richard Axel (also Biochemistry). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 William A. Blanc. B.A., Geneva, 1940; M.D., 1947; Ph.D., 1952 Paul Ellner (also Microbiology). M.S., Southern California, 1952; Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 Cecilia M. Fenoglio. B.S., St. Elizabeth, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 Soldano Ferrone (in Surgery). M.D., Milan (Italy), 1964; Ph.D., 1971 Gabriel C. Godman (also Microbiology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Conrad L. Pirani. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Ralph M. Richart. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Virginia Tennyson (also Anatomy and Cell Biology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor, 1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Professor of Microbiology

Henry J. Vogel. B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D.. 1949

Professor of Comparative Pathology

Ross M. Grey. D.V.M., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1945

Professors of Neuropathology

Phillip E. Duffy. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1947

Leon Roizin (in Psychiatry). B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1935

Professor of Surgical Pathology

Luciano Ozzello. M.D., Turin, 1951

Adjunct Professors

Robert V. Hutter. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Syracuse),

1954; M.A., Yale, 1958 Harry L. loachim. M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Sidney Pestka. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961

Professors of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borek (in Radiology). B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weitzmann Institute (Israel), 1967

Austin D. Johnston (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

Nicole Suciu-Foca (in Surgery). B.S., Bucharest (Rumania), 1959; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Professor of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Karl Perzin. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958

Clinical Professors

Victor Herbert. B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952 Pablo Rubinstein. M.D., Chile, 1962 Sheldon C. Sommers. M.D., Harvard, 1941

96 PATHOLOGY

Clinical Professor of Oral Pathology

Melvin N. Blake. D.D.S., New York University, 1955

Adjunct Clinical Professor

Jan Vincent Johannesen. M.D., Bergen (Norway), 1966

Associate Professors

John J. Fenoglio, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 Daniel M. Knowles. B.A., Bridgeport, 1969; M.D., Chicago, 1973 John F. Nicholson (also Pediatrics). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1958 Michelle A. Pellegrino (in Surgery). Ph.D., Pavia (Italy), 1963

Associate Professor of Dentistry

David J. Zegarelli. B.A., Columbia, 1965; D.D.S., 1969

Associate Professors of Neuropathology

Lester M. Geller. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.A., Michigan State, 1948; Ph.D., New York

University, 1953 Mavis Kaufman (in Psychiatry). M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ernest Baden. M.A., Sorbonne, 1946; D.D.S., New York University, 1950; M.D., Geneva,

1962 M. Richard Pachter. M.D., Zurich, 1956 William Pollack. M.S., Rutgers, 1950; Ph.D., 1964 Robert R. Rickert. B.A., Michigan, 1958; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1962 Harry H. Stumpf. B.A., New York University, 1947; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1951 John A. Terzakis. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 Kaity Yannopoulos. M.D., Greece, 1954 Frederick T. Zugibe. B.S., St. Francis (Illinois), 1951; M.S., Chicago, 1959; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Richard S. Defendini. B.A., Michigan, 1948; M.A., 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pathology

Thomas A. Blumenfeld. A. A., North Carolina, 1960; M.D., Tennessee, 1964

Arline D. Deitch (in Anatomy). B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

Reba M. Goodman. B.A., Indiana, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1953; Ph.D., 1956

Mary E. King. B.A., Smith, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Michael Pesce. B.S, St. Johns, 1967; Ph.D., 1971

Myron Tannenbaum (in Urology). B.S., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D.,

1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961 Ruth H. Vogel. Ph.D., New York University, 1958

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatric Pathology

H. Joachim Wigger. M.D., Hamburg, 1954

PATHOLOGY 97

Associate Clinical Professors

Irwin. A. Almenoff. B.S., College of the Cify of New York, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1952

Daniel W. Benninghoff. B.A., Yale, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Donald E. Brown. M.D., Harvard, 1943

John M. Budinger. B.S., Northwestern, 1950; M.D.. 1954

Robert L. Hirsch. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., 1951

Artemis D. Nash. B.A., Smith, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

David N. Silvers (also Dermatology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968

Stanley Simbonis. B.S., Yale, 1953; M.D., 1957

Harold J . Sobel . B.A., Brooklyn, 1 950; M. D. , Chicago Medical School, 1 954

Richard L. Swarm. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1949; M.D., 1950

Nicholas J. Willson. B.S., Saint Peter's, 1959; M.D., Seton Hall, 1963

Adjunct Associate Clinical Professor

Majid Ali. M.B.B.S., Punjab (India), 1963

Assistant Professors

James S. Brassel. B.A.. Holy Cross (Massachusetts), 1968; M.D., Tufts, 1973

Jerome Owen Cantor. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1975

Christopher P. Crum. B.A., Virginia, 1970; M.D., 1974

Margaret M. Grimes. B.A., Rosemont (Pennsylvania), 1971; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1975 Stephen Keller. B.S, Pace, 1971; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Jay Lefkowitch. B.A., Clark, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976 Charles C. Marboe. B.A., Princeton, 1971; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1976 Merlin D. Marquardt (in Ophthalmology). B.S., Wisconsin, 1967; M.D., 1971 Ricardo Mesa-Tejada. B.S., Manhattan, 1964; M.D., Madrid, 1970 Armand F. Miranda. B.S., Columbia, 1969; Ph.D., 1973 Ah-Kau Ng. B.S., National Chung Hsing (Taiwan), 1 969; M.A., State University of New York

(Plattsburg), 1972; Ph.D., Temple, 1975 Geoffrey J. O'Neill. B.Sc, Glasgow, 1970; Ph.D., 1973 Neelavathy Pushparaj. M.B.B.S., Madras (India), 1961 Janet Tannenbaum. B.A., Brandeis, 1969; M.Phil, Columbia, 1974; Ph.D., 1975

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Solange G. Abunassar. M.D., American (Beirut), 1968

Paul Bachner. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1959; M.D., Columbia 1963 Larry E. Douglass. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1959; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1960 Howard B. Goldstein. B.A., Colgate, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959 Arthur 1. Hurvitz. D. V.M., Michigan State, 1964; Ph.D., California (Davis), 1967 Catherine Kambolis. M.D., Athens, 1955

Paul A. Kriger. B.S., City College, 1967; M.D. New York Medical College, 1971 Richard A. McReynolds. M.S., Virginia, 1968; M.D., 1971 Basil Moumgis. M.D., Pittsburgh, 1949

Frederick Muschenheim. B.A., Howard, 1953; M.D.C.M.. McGill, 1963 Robert D. Newman. B.S., California (Los Angeles), 1958; M.D., 1962 Joseph E. O'Brien. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neuropathology

Herbert Barden. B.S., Brooklyn. 1952; M.S., New York University, 1960; Ph.D., 1964 Arthur P. Hays. B.A., Dartmouth. 1962; Med.Sci.D., 1963; M.D., Colorado, 1966

100 PATHOLOGY PEDIATRICS

Anthony Marchand. B.A., Connecticut, 1966; M.D., Duke 1970

Joel A. Roth. B.A., Brooklyn, 1964; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1968

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

Frederick van Lente, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor

S. Raymond Gambino. B.S., Antioch, 1948; M.D., Rochester, 1952

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Arthur W. Branwood. M.B.Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1942; M.D., 1948

Professors of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Robert R. Pascal. B.A., Columbia, 1958

Stephen F. Ryan. B.S., Regis (Colorado), 1957; M.D., Colorado, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

John Y. Kiyasu. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1951; Ph.D., 1955

Louise L. Phillips. B.S., William and Mary, 1934; M.D., Columbia, 1940; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professor

Deng Fong Liau. M.Sc, McGill, 1968; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pathology

Kenneth F. Button. B.A.. Indiana, 1966; M.D., 1970 Derek Englander. M.D., Royal College (London), 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

John J. Di Re. B.S., McGill. 1953; M.D., George Washington, 1957

Harold P. Gaetz. B.S., McGill, 1953; M.D., 1958

Bozidar Lazaric. M.D., Belgrade, 1956

Corazon Sian. A. A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1958; M.D., 1963

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS {continued)

P^™OLOGY VijaiKatatikam.M.D.

Elizabeth Ames, M.D. Rose-Sunitha Thayaparan, M.D. Petra Elena P. Banogon, M.D.

Pediatrics

Reuben S. Carpentier Professor and Chairman

Michael Katz (also Public Health). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963

PEDIATRICS 101

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

R. Peter Altman (Schullinger Professor of Pediatric Surgery) (also Surgery). B.A., Colgate,

1955; M.S., Rochester, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1961 Arthur D. Bloom (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., New

York University, 1960 Ralph Dell. B.A., Pomona, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961 Darryl C. De Vivo (also Neurology). B.A., Amherst, 1959; M.D., Virginia, 1964 Welton M. Gersony. B.A., Syracuse, 1954; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1958 L. Stanley James (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948 Robert B. Mellins. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1952 Sergio Piomelli. B.A., Liceo Sannazzaro (Naples), 1948; M.D., Naples, 1954 Myron Winick (Williams Professor; Director, Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Columbia,

1951; M.S., IHinois, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956

Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Abe Chutorian (also Neurology). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; B.S., 1952; M.D., 1957

Arnold R. Gold (also Neurology). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Lausanne,

1950 Sylvia P. Griffiths. B.A., Hunter, 1944; M.D., Yale, 1948 Jerry C. Jacobs. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1956 Niels L. Low (also Neurology). M.D., South Carolina, 1940 David Shaffer (also Psychiatry). M.D., London, 1961 Joe D. Wray (in Public Health). B.A., Stanford 1947; M.D., 1952

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

H. Donald Dunton. M.D., Rochester, 1945

Clinical Professor of Pediatric Psychology

Michael Lewis. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1958; Ph.D., 1962

Associate Professors

Nicholas Cunningham (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1955 Joseph Graziano (also Pharmacology). B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971 William C. Heird. B.S, Maryville, 1958; M.S., Vanderbilt, 1963; M.D., 1964 Allen L Hyman (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College,

1959 Ehud Krongrad. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1965 Gilbert W. Mellin. B.S., Bethany, 1945; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949 Akira Morishima. M.D., Keio (Japan), 1954; P.D., 1961 John F. Nicholson (also Pathology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1959 Pedro Rosso (in Obstetrics and Gynecology and Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D., Chile,

1966 David Rush (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Katherine Sprunt. B.A., Wellesley, 1942; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1945

102 PEDIATRICS

Associate Professor of Pediatric Pharmacology

Joseph Graziano. B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Russell S. Asnes. B.A., Boston, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1963

Stephen J. Atwood. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Jennifer J. Bell. B.A., Swarthmore, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1961

William J. Davis. B.A., Wilkes, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

John M. DriscoU. B.A., Hamilton, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1962

Harold E. Fox (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.Sc, Rochester and Oxford, 1972

Allan Hordof. B.A., Hobart, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966

Anthony Mansell. B.A. Princeton, 1961; M.D., Ohio State, 1965

Martin Nash. B.A., Duke, 1960; M.D., 1964

Jane Pitt. B.A., Radcliffe, 1960; M.D., 1964

Anneliese L. Sitarz. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Carl N. Steeg. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1962

Dorothy Warburton (in Human Genetics and Development). Ph.D., McGill, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

Fred Agre. B.A., Lafayette, 1957; M.D., Duke, 1961

Robert Appleby. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

William A. Bauman. B.S., Harvard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Constance J. Hayes. B.S., St. Rose, 1959; M.D., Loyola, 1965

John J. Kangos. B.S., Rutgers, 1945; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1948

Michael Novogroder. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1969 Tove Rosen. B.A., Rochester, 1961; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1965 Jack Shiller. B.A., North Carolina, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952 Joseph A. Silverman. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Assistant Professors

Kwame Anyane-Yeboa. M.D., Ghana, 1972

Fredrick Bierman. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1969; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1973 Vincent Bonagura (also Microbiology). B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975 Dennis Davidson. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1970; M.D., Loyola Stritch School of Medicine, 1974 Catherine Driscoll. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1967; M.D., Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1974 Candace Jean Erickson. B.A., George Washington, 1969; M.D., Maryland, 1973 Gabriel G. Haddad. B.S., American (Beirut), 1969; M.D., 1972 Karen Hein. B.A., Wisconsin, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Phyllis Leppert (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.S., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Yale, 1976 Joseph S. Levy. M.D., Hadassah (Israel), 1971 Adrien Moessinger. M.D., Lausanne, 1971 Nigel Paneth (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D.,

Harvard, 1972; M.P.H, Columbia, 1978 Leila M. Pang (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1970 Joan A. Regan. M.D., Missouri, 1974

Philip Rosenthal. B.S., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971; M.D., 1975 Ulana Sanocka. B.S., Brooklyn, 1968; M.D., New York University 1974

PEDIATRICS 103

Karl F. Schulze. B.A., Carleton, 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1965 Robert L. Seigle. B.A., Northwestern, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974 S. Alex Stalcup. B.A., Whittier, 1967; M.D., California, 1971 Raymond I. Stark. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1970 Shobhana Vora. M.D., Bombay (India), 1973 Christine Ann Walsh. M.D., Yale, 1973

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Bernard R. Feldman. B.S., William and Mary, 1955; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1959 Charles Feldman. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1970 William Gerba . B.S., Fordham, 1971; M. D. , Albert Einstein, 1974 Burton Grebin. B.A., Adelphi, 1962; M.D., New York Medical College, 1966 Donald E. Hutchings (also Psychiatry). B.A., Lake Forest, 1959; M.A., Chicago, 1963 Matilde Irigoyen. B.A., Buenos Aires, 1966; M.D., 1971 Celia Ores. M.D., Berne (Switzerland), 1956

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rose G. Ames. B.A., Barnard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Alexander Blum, Jr. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947

Frederick M. Bomback. B.A., Brandeis, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College, 1969

Matilda B. Brust. B.A., Marietta, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

Roger Challop. B.S., Brooklyn, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

Yvonne T. Driscoll. B.A., Trinity, 1958; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1962 T. Donald Eisenstein. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1952; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1956 Jane Eliot Fried (in Psychiatry). B.A., Vassar, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Marguerite J. Gates. B.A., Barnard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Gustave Gavis. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Thurman B. Givan, Jr. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Stephen Glaser. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Bertram H. Grossman. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Georgetown, 1959 Kenneth H. Katz. B.A., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., New York Medical College, 1973 Murray D. Kuhr. B.S., Cincinnati, 1961; M.D., Chicago, 1965 Betty C.M.L. Kuo. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964 George Lazarus. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 Dean N. Martin. B.A., Hofstra, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1963 Harriet E. McGurk. B.A., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973 Daniel J. Melia. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1949 Harriette R. Mogul. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1965 Damyanti Moorjani (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant (Bom- bay), 1957 Stanley Morrison. B.A., Temple, 1963; M.D., George Washington, 1967 Herbert Poch. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953 Morton H. Rachelson. B.A., Syracuse, 1946; M.D., Tulane, 1950 Margaret M. Rice. B.S., Marymount, 1943; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Roderick C. Richards. B.A., Cornell, 1945; M.D., 1948 Louis Rodrigues. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1959 John S. Rosmaita. B.A., St. Peter's, 1953; M.D., State University of New York, (Downstate),

1957 Malcolm S. Schwartz. D.O., College of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery, 1967 Edith M. J. Kuo-Ying Shen. M.D., Ludwig-Maximilian (Munich), 1960

104 PEDIATRICS

Kung-Tso Sheng. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai), 1954

Elliot J. Siege!. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1954; M.D., 1968

Gilbert Simon. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Rochester, 1962

William H. Smith. B.A., Rochester, 1941; M.D., 1944

Susan Spear. B.A., Wellesley, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972

David Stiles. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943

Martin B. Vita. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., 1954

William W. Whitten. B.A., Wesleyan, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947

David Wisotsky. B.S., City College, 1970; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

Edwin A. Goldstein. B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958

ASSCX;iATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Lilian Wah-Ying Chiu, M.D. Maryann J. Colenda, M.D. John L. Costa, M.D. Robert A. Hands, M.D. Alan Kanter, M.D. Peter F. Migel, M.D. Robert M. Schwartz, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Elizabeth Anisfeld, Ph.D. David Evans, Ph.D. Frank T. Nakamura, B.S. Rajasekhar Ramakrishnan,

Sc.D. Carol Seaman, M.S. Malathy Singh, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Martha L. Amarant, M.D. Gaya Aranoff, M.D. Bruce Beeber, M.D. Betty Chang, M.D. William J. Chernack, M.D. Michele Denize, M.D. Arlene Falk, M.D. Stanley H. Gilbert, Jr., M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Patrick Hicks-Hartman,

M.D. Marie B. Keith, M.D. Michael L. Lapkin, M.D. Judith Luskin, M.D. Sylvia Morgan, M.D. Morton J. Seligman, M.D. John G. Slater, M.D. D. Loran Southern, M.D. Nicki Lynn Timko, M.D. Mary Versfelt, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Alma T. Blitz, M.D. Kuang Hu Chien, M.D. Chung Chieng, M.D. Bernard Etra, M.D. Rosalinda Rubinstein, M.D. Susan Skalsky, M.D. Samuel T. Wilmit, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Mysore R. Gandhi, M.S. Carol Seaman, M.S.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Yelda Aksoy, M.S. Naomi Bartnoff, M.S.

ASSOCIATES {continued)

Mark Chait, B.S. Ludovici Guarini, M.D. Michael Koch, Ph.D. Dorcas Koeningsberger,

M.S. Anita Lustenberger, M.S. Mary Judith Murphy, M.D. Catherine Muttart, M.S. Cheryl L. Nagel, M.S. Molly L. Nozyce, M.A. Linda D. O'Neill, M.S. Robin Schwartz, M.S. Thomas Soulos, M.S. Janice A. Stalcup,

M.P.H. Mary E. Steir, M.S. Phyllis Taterka, M.S. Sten Vermund, M.D. Alan Zubrow, M.D. Christine L. Zucker, M.S.

LECTURERS Albert Aharon, M.D. Armond V. Mascia, M.D. Yaakov Schechter, Ph.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER James A. Wolff, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joe H. Cannon. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1942; M.D., 1945

Allan Cunningham. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Western Reserve, 1966

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS Pedro De Alarcon, M.D. John G. Freehafer, M.D.

PEDIATRICS 105

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor

Margaret Heagerty. B.A., Seton Hill, 1957; B.S., West Virginia, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Wiener Leblanc. B.S., Haiti, 1950; M.D., 1956

Gene-Ann Polk. B.A., Oberlin, 1948; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1952;M.P.H, Columbia, 1958

Assistant Professors

Ilene Fennoy. B.A., Stanford, 1968; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1973 Cleveland M. Moore. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1971; M.D., Stanford, 1976 Mark Rapoport. B.A., M.D., Boston, 1970; M.P.H., Howard, 1973

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Araceli R. Ancajas. M.D., Santo Tomas (Phillipines), 1961

Josephine Kerr. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., New York University, 1951

Yusuf M. Khakoo. M.B., B.S., Bombay, 1962

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning. B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

David Bateman. B.A., Wooster, 1968; M.D., Tufts, 1973

Serge Fenelon. M.D., Lausanne, 1973

Vincent E. Hutchinson. M.B., B.S., West Indies, 1972

Marguerita A. Silvera. B.S., Brooklyn, 1969; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973

Claudina Y. Wallace. B.S, Howard, 1963; M.D., 1967

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Beverly Anderson, M.D. Delores J. Gayle-Thompson, M.D. Anne Hutcheon, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Robert Hutcheon, M.D. Petronella Manning-Alleyne, M.D. Sheila Lynn Palevsky, M.D. Rachelle Scott, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

Stephen Wang. B.A. Columbia, 1960; M.D., 1964

Philip R. Ziring. B.A., New York University, 1958; M.D., 1962

Assistant Clinical Professors

Martin Cohen. M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1967 Ella Cummins. B.A., Smith, 1935; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1939

106 PEDIATRICS

Robert Kornblum. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1962 William Lupatkin. B.S., Columbia, 1965; M.S., 1966; Ph.D., 1970; M.D., Miami (Florida),

1974 Lawrence M. Skolnick. B.A., Queens, 1968; M.D., New York University, 1972; M.P.H.,

North Carolina, 1980

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS Elizabeth Hill, M.D. Rama Seshamani, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

Solomon J. Cohen. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1951 Gloria Schrager. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1948

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joseph I. Boylan. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Yale, 1955

Fredrick C. Braun, Jr. B.S., Georgetown, 1951; M.D., Jefferson, 1955

Howard S. Britt. B.A., M.D.. Boston, 1970

Burton M. Feinsmith. B.S., Arkansas, 1949; M.S., Florida, 1951; M.D., Berne, 1961

Benjamin H. Josephson. B.S., North Carolina, 1949; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

Joseph Kalbacher. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Cornell, 1946

John H. Krikorian. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Bowman Gray, 1963

Carolkay Lissenden. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsyl- vania, 1964

Lewis I. Sank. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1957; M.D., 1961

Frederic A. Schulaner. B.S., Tufts, 1955; M.D., 1959

Margaret E. Symonds. M.B., London, 1941; B.S., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Paul Avondoglio, M.D. Arnold N. Constad, M.D. Paul A. Kearney, M.D. Barry Lauton, M.D. Wayne D. Stettler, M.D. Charles B. Terhune, M.D. Sandy P. Waran, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Frank P. Frenda, M.D. Carl H. Herman, M.D. Alexander R. Horowitz,

M.D. Victor S. Lamberto, M.D. Bharati S. Mullick, M.D. Vinnakota V.P. Rao, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Dudley A. Roberts, M.D. Stanislawa Rosnowski, M.D. Arvind P. Shah, M.D. James Sorger, M.D. John F. Vigorita, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Pediatrics

Louis Z. Cooper. B.S., Yale, 1954; M.D., 1957

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Susan G. Gordon. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1946; M.D., Howard, 1950 Doris L. Wethers. B.S., Queens (New York), 1948; M.D., Yale, 1952

PEDIATRICS 107

Associate Clinical Professor

Helen Rodriguez-Trias. B.S., Puerto Rico, 1957; M.D., 1960

Assistant Professor

Elena B. Klein. M.D., State Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1953; Ph.D., Institute of Microbiology (Rumania), 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatric Psychology

Madeline W. Appell. B.A., Queens (New York), 1962; M.A., 1963

Jeanne Brooks-Gunn. B.A., Connecticut College, 1969; Ed.M., Harvard, 1970; Ph.D.,

Pennsylvania, 1975 Nathan A. Fox. B.A., Williams, 1970; Ph.D., Harvard, 1975

Assistant Clinical Professors

Dennis Allendorf . B.S., Georgetown, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College, 1970

Anastasios Anastasiades. M.D., Athens, 1950

Robert Antar. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1970

Saroj Sahgal Bakshi. M.B., B.S., Government Medical College (India), 1960; M.D., Institute

of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (India), 1969 Chaya Chakrabarti. B.Sc, Calcutta, 1963; M.D., 1969 Herbert I. Cohen. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

Gisela T. Dalrymple. M.D., Woman 's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1951 Ragabardial R. Dwarka. B.S., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1965; M.D., 1969 Donald L. Feinberg. B.A., Hamilton, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949 Joan M. Flanigan. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1962; M.D., 1966 Fadel M. Hochroth. B.A., Louisville, 1953; M.D., 1957 Harry Kimmel. B.A., St. Andrews (Bucharest), 1940; M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Katherine Lodyjensky. M.D., Montreal, 1943 Neil Lombardi (also Neurology). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967 Monica Ruth Meyer. B.A., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1973 Anthony F. Michel. M.D., Faculte de Medecine (Haiti), 1956 Richard Mones. B.A., Brooklyn, 1967; M.D., New York Medical College, 1971 Farrokh Sharivar. M.D., Tehran, 1966 Shantha Subramaniam. M.B., B.S., Madras (India), 1962 Lucy M. Swift. B.A., Barnard 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Phienvit Tantibedhyangkul. M.D., Mahido (Thailand), 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Sayenna A. Uduman. D.M.E.S., Kilpauk (India), 1963; M.D., Madras, 1966 Max F. Van Gilder. B.S, Tulane, 1967; M.D., 1971 Ranjeet Virdi. B.S, India, 1960; M.D., 1960 Elizabeth Watkins. B.A., Randolph-Macon Women's College, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES {continued) INSTRUCTORS [continued)

PEDIATRICS Priscilla W. Lewis, M.D. Myrna Aquino Damien,

Ricarda L. Baum, M.D. Edward A. Nichols, M.D. M.D.

Renata Frenkel, M.D. Flora Ramirez, M.D. Morel Duverseau, M.D.

Robert L. Hite, M.D. Thelma Verano-Santiago, Christodoulos lordanou, Diane Hochlerin, M.D. M [) M.D.

Nancy Holahan, M.D. Richard Gary Merkler, M.D.

Shahid Hossenali, M.D. INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL David Osgood, M.D.

Thomas H. Hyatt, Jr., M.D. PEDIATRICS Melanie Rivenzon, M.D.

Ruth E. Kessler, M.D. Robert William Amler, M.D. Michael Glen Teitel, M.D.

Kusum Khanna, M.B.B.S. Carlos Emilio Arzeno, M.D. Steven Tsoutsouras', M.D.

Brenda Harris Tynes, M.D.

108 PHARMACOLOGY

Pharmacology

David Hosack Professor and Chairman

Brian F. Hoffman. A. A., Princeton, 1943; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1947

Professors

J. Thomas Bigger, Jr. (also Medicine). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960

Frederick G. Hofmann. B.A., Michigan, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard 1952

Norman Kahn (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1954; D.D.S., 1958; Ph.D.,

1964 Harold C. Neu (also Medicine). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Shi-Hsun Ngai (also Anesthesiology). M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1944 Michael R. Rosen (also Pediatrics). B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1964 Wilbur H. Sawyer (Gustavus and Louis Pfeiffer Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D.,

1945; Ph.D., 1950 Hsueh-Hwa Wang. M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1946 Andrew L. Wit. B.S., Bates, 1963; Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Adjunct Professors

Paul F. Cranefield. Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1946; Ph.D., 1951; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964

Peter K. T. Pang. B.Sc, Hong Kong 1964; M.S., Yale, 1968; Ph.D., 1970

Jurg Schneider. M.D., Basel (Switzerland), 1945

Sidney Spector (also Anesthesiology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jefferson,

1956 Robert M. Weiss. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1957; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1960

Associate Professors

John Bilezikian (also Medicine). B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Joseph Graziano (in Pediatrics). B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Adjunct Associate Professors

Marvin R. Blumenthal. B.S., Michigan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949 Ira Cohen. B.A., Columbia, 1969; M.D., Ph.D., New York University, 1974 Martin M. Winbury. B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.S., Maryland, 1942; Ph.D., New York University, 1954

Senior Research Associate

Lance L. Simpson. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., California, 1969

Assistant Professors

Kenneth Dangman. B.S., Bucknell, 1971; M.A., M.Phil., Columbia, 1974; Ph.D., 1977

Peter Danilo, Jr. Ph.D., Columbia, 1974

Daniel J. Goldberg (also Neurology). Ph.D., Yale, 1974

Jaya Haldar. M.Sc. Calcutta, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1966

Douglas N. Ishii (in the Cancer Center). B.A., Berkeley, 1967; Ph.D., Stanford 1974

Alan M. Jeffrey (also Public Health). B.S., Hull (England), 1966; Ph.D., North Wales, 1970

PHARMACOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY 109

Lou Katz (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959

Tuan Due Pham (also Anatomy). B.S., St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S., Loyola, 1967;

M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 Richard B. Robinson. Ph.D., Illinois, 1975 Steven A. Siegelbaum (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). Ph.D., Yale, 1978

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Edward B. Kirsten. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., New York University, 1966;

Ph.D., City College, 1969 Lawrence Tilley. D. V.M., Iowa State, 1969

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Truman R. Brown, Ph.D. Pamela Garlick, Ph.D. Samuel M. Ross, B.E.E. (Electrical Engineering)

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Arline Albala, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Penelope Altman Boyden,

Ph.D. WiUiam Eng, B.S. Irina Golyakhovsky, Ph.D. Kenneth W. Hewett, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES (continued) Arthur Hoffmeyer, B.S. Iris Nemhauser, Ph.D.

LECTURER

Kwang Soo Lee, M.D.

Physiology

Professor and Acting Chairman

David Schachter. B.S., New York University, 1946, M.D., 1949

Professors

Shu Chien. M.S., National Taiwan, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957

Eric R. Kandel (also Psychiatry). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

Irving Kupfermann (also Psychiatry). Ph.D., Chicago, 1964

William L. Nastuk. B.S, Rutgers, 1939; Ph.D., 1945

Mero Nocenti. B.A., West Virginia, 1951; M.S., 1952; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955

John P. Reuben (in Neurology). B.A., Crinnell, 1954; M.S., Rochester. 1956; Ph.D.. Florida,

1959 James H. Schwartz (also Neurology). B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York University,

1959; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1964

Associate Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Medicine). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1962

Martin Blank. B.S, College of the City of New York, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia. 1957; Ph.D.,

Cambridge, 1959 Raimond Emmers. B.A., East Texas Baptist, 1953; M.A., North Carolina, 1955; Ph.D.,

Syracuse, 1958 Michel Ferin (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Louvain, 1964 Jorge Fischbarg (in Ophthalmology). M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D.. Chicago. 1971 Claude P. J. Ghez (also Neurology). B.A., Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964

Senior Research Associates

John D. Koester. Shunichi Usami. 1957

B.A., Wooster (Ohio), 1965; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971

M.D., Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine (Japan), 1949; Ph.D.,

110 PHYSIOLOGY PSYCHIATRY

Assistant Professors

Kung-Ming Jan (also Medicine). M.B., National Taiwan, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Herbert Lipowsky. M.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1968; Ph.D., California (San

Diego), 1975 Hugh Nellans (in Medicine). B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATES

Richard E. Abbott, Ph.D. Anna Linda Baldwin, Ph.D.

Jack T. Alexander, B.S. Robert G. King, B.Sc.

Ronald D. Carlin, Ph.D. Angeles B. Ribera, Ph.D.

Szloma Kowarski, M.A. Lily M. Soo, Ph.D. Mary M. L. Lee, Ph.D.

Psychiatry

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Acting Chairman

Sidney Malitz. B.S., Tulane, 1943; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1946

At New York State Psychiatric Institute

Professors

Eric R. Kandel (also Physiology). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Donald F. Klein. B.A., Colby 1947; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1952 Irving Kupferman (also Physiology) (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). Ph.D.,

Chicago, 1964 Edward J. Sachar (Lawrence C. Kolb Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania,

1956 Robert L. Spitzer. B.A., Cornell, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957 Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine) (also Public Health). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D.,

Columbia, 1951

Professor of Biochemistry

Maurice M. Rapport. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1941; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1 946

Professor of Dentistry

Austin H. Kutscher. B.A., New York University, 1945; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946

Professor of Medical Psychology

Samuel Sutton. Ph.D., Chicago, 1955

Professor of Neuropathology

Leon Roizin. B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal (Milan), 1936

Professor of Public Health

Denise Kandel (Sociomedical Sciences). Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

PSYCHIATRY 111

Professor of Social Sciences

Bruce Dohrenwend (also Public Health) (Epidemiology). B.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Cornell, 1955

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gene G. Abel. M.D., Iowa, 1965

H. Donald Dunton (in Pediatrics). M.D., Rochester, 1945

L. Erlenmyer-Kimling (in Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D.,

1960 Ronald R. Fieve. B.A., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1955

Archie R. Foley. B.A., Queen's (Canada), 1943; M.D., CM., 1947; M.S., Columbia, 1962 Lothar Gidro-Franck. M.D., Columbia, 1948 Alexander H. Glassman. B.A., Illinois, 1956; M.D., 1958 Murray Glusman. B.S., New York University, 1934; M.D., 1938 Barry J. Gurland. M.B., Ch.B., Capetown, 1955 Joseph Jaffe. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., New York University, 1947 Donald S. Kornfeld. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1950; M.D., Yale, 1954 John D. Rainer (in Human Genetics and Development). M.D., Columbia, 1951 James H. Ryan. B.A., Yale, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 David Shaffer (also Pediatrics). M.D., London, 1961 John Weber. B.A., Duke, 1939; M.D., Yale, 1943

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner (in Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Professors of Clinical Psychology

Anke Ehrhardt. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1969

Rachel Gittelman. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

Clinical Professors

Willard Gaylin. B.A., Harvard, 1947; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1951 Roger MacKinnon. M.D., Columbia, 1950

Lionel Ovesey. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1937; M.D., 1941 Ethel Person. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

Rita Rudel. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1946; M.A., 1949; Ph.D., New York University, 1955

Associate Professor of Medical Psychology

Jacques Rutschmann. D.Sc, Geneva, 1956

Associate Professor of Neuropathology

Mavis Kaufman (in Pathology). M.D., New York University, 1944

112 PSYCHIATRY

Associate Professors of Clinical Neurobiology and Behavior

Thomas J. Carew. B.A., Loyola (Los Angeles), 1966; M.A., California State (Los Angeles),

1967; Ph.D., California (Riverside), 1970 Vincent F. Castellucci. B.A., Laval, 1960; B.Sc, 1964; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1968

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurochemistry

Hadassah Tamir. M.S., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1955; Ph.D., Israel Institute of Technology, 1959

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Liselotte Graf. M.D., Vienna, 1937

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Ruth Bennett (Sociology) (in Public Health). Ph.D., Columbia, 1962 Jerrold S. Maxmen. B.A., Wayne State, 1963; M.D., 1967

Frederic M. Quitkin. B.A., Princeton, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1962 Ronald O. Rieder. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., 1968 Stuart Yudofsky. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Baylor, 1970

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychology

Judith V. Becker. M.S., Eastern Washington State, 1968; Ph.D., Southern Mississippi,

1975 W. Crawford Clark. Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Jean Endicott. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967 Dennis D. Kelly. Ph.D., Columbia, 1966 Heino F. L. Meyer-Bahlburg. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychopharmacology

Thomas Cooper. M.A., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1970

Associate Clinical Professors

Anne E. Bernstein. B.A., Barnard, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Paul A. Bradlow. M.D., Hahnemann, 1946

Richard G. Druss. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Gloria Faretra. M.D., Georgetown, 1952

Richard A. Gardner. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956

Rodman Gilder, Jr. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Arthur Green. B.A., Rochester, 1951; M.D., Amsterdam (The Netherlands), 1955

Stanley Heller. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Winslow R. Hunt. B.A., Chicago, 1946; M.A., 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Alexander N. Levay. M.D., Rochester, 1957

Robert S. Liebert. B.S., Syracuse, 1951; M.A., Clark, 1956; M.D., New York University,

1960 Mary C. MacKay. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1959

Donald I. Meyers. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1946; M.D., Jefferson, 1950 Helen C. Meyers. B.A., Hunter, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949

PSYCHIATRY 113

John F. O'Connor. B.S.. Columbia. 1948: M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Seymour Post. M.D., New York University, 1947 Daniel Shapiro. M.D., Illinois, 1945

Leonard M. Sheehy. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., McGiii, 1968 Henry I. Spitz. B.A., Lafayette (Pennsylvania), 1961; M.D., New York Medical College,

1965 Ralph N. Wharton. M.D., Columbia, 1957

Associate Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

Kenneth Frank. M.S., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatric Social Work

Bluma Swerdloff. D.SW., Columbia, 1960

Associate Clinical Professor of Neuropathology

Nicholas Willson. B.S., St. Peter's (Jersey City), 1959; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1963

Senior Research Associate

Morton Levitt. M.S., George Washington, 1959; Ph.D., Howard, 1966

Assistant Professors of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Craig H. Bailey (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.A., Lehigh. 1967: M.S.,

1969; Ph.D., 1973 Samuel Schacher (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.A.. Columbia. 1971;

M.A., 1974; Ph.D., 1976 Klaudiusz Weiss (also Biochemistry) (in Dentistry). M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State

University of New York (Stony Brook), 1973

Assistant Professors of Biochemistry

George Alexander. B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953 Herbert L. Meltzer. B.S., Long Island, 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gregory Asnis. B.S., Dickinson College, 1968; M.D., Hahnemann, 1972

Miron Baron. M.D., Tel Aviv, 1972

Jerry Finkel. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

David V. Forrest. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

David Friedman. B.A., City University of New York, 1965; M.A., 1968; Ph.D.. 1972

Abby Joy Fyer. B.A., Reed 1969: M.D., New York University 1973

Madelyn Schwartz Gould. A.A., Princeton, 1974; M.P.H.. Columbia, 1976; M.Phil, 1978

Laurence L. Greenhill. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D.. Albert Einstein, 1967

Kenneth Greenspan. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963

Yoosuf A. Haveliwala. M.D.. Bombay, 1961; M.R.C. Royal College of Physicians and

Surgeons, 1968; M.S, State University of New York (Buffalo), 1976 Frederick Kass. B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970 Janes Kurucz. M.D., Budapest, 1950

114 PSYCHIATRY

Michael R. Liebowitz. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., 1969

Patrick J. McGrath, Jr. B.S., Seton Hall, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Joaquim Puig-Antich. B.A., LaSalle Bonavona (Spain), 1960; M.D., Barcelona (Spain),

1967 Steven Paul Roose. B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1974 Lawrence Sharpe. D.P.M., London, 1961 Andrew Skodol. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1971 Bernard T. Walsh. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Harvard, 1972 Daniel T. Williams. B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Cornell, 1969

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychology

Edward Scott Charles. B.A., City University of New York, 1965; M.A., 1968; M.A., New

School for Social Research, 1974 Donald J. Dillon. Ph.D., Fordham, 1955 Helen Hanesian. B.S., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1953; M.A., Columbia, 1961;

Ed.D., 1966 Donald E. Hutchings (also Pediatrics). Ph.D., Columbia, 1965 Maureen Kanzler. B.A., Hunter, 1938; M.A., New York University, 1940; M.S., Hunter,

1959; Ph.D., Fordham, 1967 Stephen E. Karpiak. Ph.D., Fordham, 1972 Dolores Kreisman. B.A., Barnard, 1953; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969 Isak Prohovnik. M.Sc, Lund (Sweden), 1980; Ph.D., 1981 Michael Seth Quittman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1968; Ph.D., Purdue, 1974 Cornelis Stokman. B.A., Nijmegen (Holland), 1962; M.A., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., 1967

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Social Work

Janet B. Williams. B.S., Tufts, 1969; M.S., Southeastern Massachusetts, 1972; M.S.W., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Social Sciences

Alexander Askenazy. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Carol L.M. Caton (in Public Health). B.S., Columbia, 1962; Ph.D., Yale, 1969

Muriel Hammer. Ph.D., Columbia, 1961

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Nettie Terestman. M.S. W., Columbia, 1940; D.S. W., 1963

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Robert Bowker. B.S., Springfield 1969; V.M.D., Pennsylvania, 1973; Ph.D., 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professors of Public Health

Judith Rabkin (Epidemiology). B.A., Wellesley, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1967;

M.P.H, Columbia, 1974 Neil Risch (Biostatistics). B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1972; M.S., Illinois, 1973;

Ph.D., California (Los Angeles), 1979

Assistant Clinical Professors

Syed Abdullah. M.A., Calcutta, 1961; M.B., 1962 Harry D. Albert. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1962; M.D., 1965

PSYCHIATRY 115

Morton J . Aronson . B.A., Temple, 1 944; M.D., 1947

John A. Atchley. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Athanasia Balkoura. M.D., Athens, 1960

Amiram Barkai. M.Sc, Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1963; Ph.D., 1970

Leah Beck. M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1943

Christian R. Beels. B.A., Rochester, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1963

Robinettc Bell. B.A., Smith, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Raymond Bernick. B.S., Dalhousie, 1956; M.D., 1961

Stanley Bone. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1974

Edward N. Brennan. B.S., Trinity (Hartford), 1951; M.D., Yale, 1955

Paul F. Califano. B.A., Adelphi, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1954 Robert J. Campbell. M.D., Columbia, 1948

Ian Alberto Canino. B.S., Georgetown, 1966; M.D., Puerto Rico, 1970 William J. Chambers. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Tufts, 1972 Harvey R. Chertoff. B.A., Columbia, 1962; M.D., Einstein, 1966 Stanley J. Coen. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., 1962 Frances Cohen. B.A., Harvard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975 Max P. Cohen. M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Louise Coleman. M.D., Southern California, 1948

Francine Cournos. B.S., City College, 1967; M.D., New York University, 1971 DeWitt L. Crandell. M.D., Arkansas, 1955 Barbara H. DeBetz. M.D., Miami, 1970 Zira De Fries. M.D., New York Medical College, 1942 Leonard Diamond. B.A., Tulane, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1973 Richard A. Dickes. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967 Robert M. Elvolve. B.A., Michigan, 1962; M.D. Chicago, 1966 Charles F. Entelis. M.D., Virginia, 1974 James W. Flax. B.A., Antioch, 1971; M.D., Minnesota, 1974 Gerald I. Fogel. M.D., Michigan, 1962

Bruce Forester. B.A., Dartmouth, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965 Eugene A. Friedberg. M.D., Buffalo, 1958

Bimalendu Ganguly. M.B.,B.S., Calcutta Medical College (India), 1964 Lee R. Gardner. B.A., Barnard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959 Myron R. Gershberg. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.A., 1956, M.D., Buffalo, 1960 lona Ginsberg. B.A., Vassar, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Richard J. Glavin. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Rochester, 1955 Ana B. Click. B.A., Bennington, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1963 Robert Click. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D, Columbia, 1966

Edwin Goldstein (in Pediatrics). B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1958 Lloyd A. Hamilton, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D, Harvard 1954 Harvey M. Hammer. B.A., Cornell, 1956; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960 Martin V. Hart. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1950 Rose Hartmann. B.A., New York University, 1937; M.D., Woman's Medical College of

Pennsylvania, 1945 Myra S. Hatterer. B.A., New York University, 1955; M.D., New York Medical College,

1959 Gregory Heimark. B.A., St. Olaf (Minnesota), 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Michelle L. Hirsch. B.S., City College, 1968; M.D., State University of New York (Syracuse),

1973 Joel S. Hoffman. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Steven E. Hyler. B.A., New York University, 1971; M.D., New York Medical College,

1975 David Iverson. B.A., Rochester, 1963; M.D., Boston, 1968 Roberta Jaeger. B.A., Barnard, 1963; M.D., Columbia, 1966

116 PSYCHIATRY

David Jaffe. M.D., Jefferson, 1950

Frank S. Jewett (also Dentistry). B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957

Lila J. Kalinich. B.A., Northwestern, 1966; M.D., 1969

Neil B. Kavey. B.A., Princeton, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Thomas Kranjac. B.A., New York University, 1970; M.D., New York Medical College,

1975 Peter Laderman. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1947 Frederick Lane. B.A., Cornell, 1949; M.D., Yale, 1953 Norman D. Lazar. M.D., Louisville, 1948

Leon Lefer. B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., Lausanne, 1952 Burton Lerner. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957 David Y. Levine. M.D., New York University, 1961 Steven J. Levitan. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., Buffalo, 1965 Eric Marcus (also Social Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969 Henry L. McCurtis. B.S., Texas Southern, 1968; M.D., Stanford, 1974 William McFarlane. B.A., Earlham (Indiana), 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Frederick Mendelsohn. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Stanford, 1958 Michael Milano. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964 Robert S. Mumford. M.D., McGill, 1943

Philip R. Muskin. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., New York Medical College, 1974 Joseph C. Napoli. B.S., State University Of New York (Stony Brook), 1977; D.D.S.,

Columbia, 1981 Jaime Nos. M.D., Valencia (Spain), 1967; M.P.H., Columbia, 1975 David Douglas Olds. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1981 Louis Padovano. B.S., Georgetown, 1952; M.D., 1956 Robert P. Parkin. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1950 David Peretz. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D.,

New York University, 1959 Kathryn F. Prescott. M.D., New York University, 1950 Lyle E. Rosnick. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Arnold Rothstein. B.A., Brown, 1958; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1962 Boris Rubinstein, (also Pediatrics). B.A., Colegio Israelita (Mexico City), 1961; M.D.,

Nacional (Mexico), 1970; M.P.H., Harvard, 1974 Barbara Sacco. R.N., Mary Immaculate Hospital School of Nursing, 1958 M. Bruce Sarlin. B.A., M.D., Tulane, 1957 Irene B. Seeland. M.D., Heidelberg, 1965

Lawrence Shaderowfsky. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York Medical School, 1960 Edward M. Shelley. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1958 Charles Siegal. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1958 Frieda H. Spady. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967 Jerome Steiner. B.A., Chicago, 1949; M.A., 1951; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1962 Jonathan W. Stewart. B.A., Swarthmore, 1967; M.D., Yale, 1971 Diane L. Stone. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Ann R. Turkel. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1952 Gloria M. Warner. M.D., New York University, 1959 Martin Weiler. B.A., Syracuse, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Chicago Medical School,

1954 Richard M. Weiss. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1960 Josef H. Weissberg. M.S., Albany Medical College, 1952 George H. Wilkie. M.D., Harvard, 1957 Donald A. Winn. M.D., Oklahoma, 1957 Beth K. Yudofsky. B.A., Smith, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976

PSYCHIATRY 117

Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatrics

Jane Eliot Fried. B.A., Vassar, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatric Psychology

Jeannette J. Jansky. M.S., College of the City of New York, 1960; Ph.D., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Mark J. Blechner. M.S., Yale, 1975; Ph.D., 1977

Melinda Broman. B.A., Cornell, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1977

David Caron. B.A., Grinnell, 1971; M.A., Syracuse, 1974; Ph.D., Ottawa, 1979

Irwin Mansdorf. M.A., Adelphi, 1973; Ph.D., 1976

Letty Munz. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., College of the City of New York, 1952;

Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Dennis Shulman. B.A., Brandeis, 1972; Ph.D., Harvard, 1976 Eric H. Singer. Ph.D., New York University, 1975 Gail L. Wasserman. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1967; M.A., Illinois, 1970; Ph.D., City University of

New York, 1977

Assistant Clinical Professors of Psychiatric Social Work

Miriam Gibbon. B.A., Antioch, 1954; M.S. W., Columbia, 1957

David McDonnell. B.A., St. Mary's (Baltimore), 1964; M.S. W., Pennsylvania, 1966; D.S. W.,

1972 Bobba Jean Moody. B.A., Hunter, 1964; M.S. W., Fordham, 1968

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Burton August, M.D. Donald C. Bell, M.D. Alvin J. Glick, M.D. Ivan Goldberg, M.D. Gurston Goldin, M.D. Arthur R. Jacobs, M.D. Naomi Leiter, M.D. Virginia Lozzi, M.D. George Luhrmann, M.D. Ira L. Mintz, M.D. Phyllis Robbins, M.D. Gerda Strika, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Samuel W. Anderson, Ph.D. David P. Birkett,

M.D.,B.Ch. Richard L. Blumenthal,

Ph.D. Barbara Ann Cornblatt,

Ph.D. Richard S. Feldman, M.D. Anita K. Fischer, Ph.D. Mitchell L. Kietzman,

M.D. John A. Logan, M.D.

ASSOCIATES {continued)

Yvonne Marcuse, Ph.D. John Nee, M.P.H. Arthur S. Perumal, Ph.D. Stephanie Portnoy, Ph.D. Kurt Salzingcr, Ph.D. Suzanne Salzinger, Ph.D. David Wilder, M.D. Byron Yoburn, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN BIOCHEMISTRY

Sahebarao Mahadic, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Geary E. Ahem, M.D. Satwani Ahluwalia, M.B.B.S.

Paul J. Ambrosini, M.D. Houshang Aminian, M.D. liana L. Appelby, Ph.D. Stanley D. Arkow, M.D. John J. Barsa, M.D. Anne Bartlett, M.D. Barbara J. Bouley, M.D.,

O.T.R. Abraham A. Bridger, M.D. Alexis Brosen, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Sydney C. Bush, M.D. Janel S. Carino, M.D. Edmund Chaitman, M.D. Leon Chattah, M.D. Daniel Eliot Cohen, M.D. Charles Andrew Dackis, M.D.

Susan M. Deakins, M.D. Paolo Decina, M.D. Dominick Di Fabio, M.D. Jennifer I. Downey, M.D. Paula Eagle, M.D. Katherine Falk, M.D. Sylvia M. Furstenberg, M.D. Jack Matthew Gorman, M.D.

Rosalie Greenberg, M.D. Wilma Marsha Harrison, M.D.

Stanley M. Hertz, M.D. Martin J. Hoffman, M.D. Stanislaw P. Jonas, M.D. Sherry Katz-Bearnot, M.D. Robert Kertzner, M.D. Bonnie Klaufman, M.D. Richard A. Kresch, M.D. David Barry Liebow, M.D. Craig M. Morris, M.D.

118 PSYCHIATRY

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Patricio R. Paez, M.D. Jeffrey M. Pines, M.D. Leslie Lynn Powers, M.D. Harris Rabinovich, M.D. Rogelio Roncal, M.D. Jeffrey Rosecan, M.D. Neal Ryan, M.D. Robert Santulli, M.D. David P. Schiebel, M.D. Maria I. Schneider, M.D. Karl John Schroeder, M.D. Jonathan R. Schwartz, M.D.

Beth June Seelig, M.D.

Samuel Simmens, M.A.

Gloria Jean Stern, M.D.

Fay Stetner, M.S.

Rafael Tavares, M.D.

Paul Douglas Trautman,

M.D.

Alan J. Tuckman, M.D.

Hector O. Varas, M.D.

James Wickstrom, M.D.

Thomas J. Yager, M.D.

Gerald R. Yagoda, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Rhianon Allen, Ph.D. Richard P. Cressen, Ph.D. Judith F. Feldman, Ph.D. Richard Gaines, Ph.D. Gail Levy, Ph.D. Linda J. Skinner, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK Natalie F. Been, M.S.W. Bruce Y. Bleecker, M.S.W. Susan Braiman, M.S.W. Carla Daichman, M.S.W. Patricia Fink, M.S.W. Elizabeth Golden, M.S.W. Kathleen C. Lopez, M.S. Sally Lord, M.S.W. Reed C.W. Moskowitz, M.D. Reggie Swenson, M.S.W. Anna C. Welton, M.S.W.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

James W. Montgomery,

M.S.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL WORK

L. Robert Adams, M.S.W.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Selda Diatlo, M.S. Karen Goldberg, M.S.W. Stephen D. Rosenheck, M.S.W.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Laura Lee Dean, B.A. Martin McCarthy, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Edward Michael Herman,

Ph.D.

Joan Layton, M.A.

Mary W. Masland, M.S.

Richard K. Replin, B.A.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Viola W. Bernard, M.D. John Cedarquist, M.D. John A. Cook, M.D. Katrina De Hirsch, B.A. Marjorie H. Frank Olga Frankel, M.D. William Goldfarb, M.D. George Goldman, M.D. Soil Goodman, M.D. George A. Jervis, M.D. Henriette R. Klein, M.D. Lawrence C. Kolb, M.D. Bernard Pacella, M.D. Herbert Spiegel, M.D. Leo Srole, M.D. Alberta Szalita, M.D. Joseph Zubin, M.D.

LECTURERS

Kenneth Z. Altschuler,

M.D. Ann H. Appelbaum, M.D. Jacob A. Arlow, M.D. Stuart A. Asch, M.D. Bruce Ballard, M.D. Jose Barchilon, M.D. Beatrice Beebe, M.D. Milton M. Berger, M.D. Hector Bird, M.D. Marion S. Blank, Ph.D. Henry Brill, M.D. Alexander Broden, M.D.

LECTURERS (continued) Gerard E. Bruder, Ph.D. Arnold M. Cooper, M.D. Paul William DeBell,

M.D. Lawrence Deutsch, M.D. Samuel L. Feder, M.D. Allen Frances, M.D. Sheldon Gaylin, M.D. Barbara Gillam-Lawergren,

Ph.D. Matthew Gold, M.S. Eugene L. Goldberg, M.D. David S. Goldman, M.D. Gary Grad, M.D. Lillian Gross, M.D. William I. Grossman, Ph.D. Ernest M. Gruenberg, M.D. Gad Hakerma, Ph.D. Howard F. Hunt, Ph.D. Richard A. Isay, M.D. Jerome Jaffe, M.D. Steven E. Katz, M.D. Otto F. Kernberg, M.D. Paulina Kerberg, M.D. Alan M. Levy, M.D. Eric Loutsch, M.D. Mark Mankoff, M.D. Murial Morris, M.D. Wayne A. Myers, M.D.

Abbas Nahas, M.D.

John M. Oldham, M.D.

Samuel W. Perry, M.D.

Robert W. Rieber, Ph.D.

Bennett L. Rosner, M.D.

Ellen Rowntree, M.D.

Franklin D. Russek, M.D.

Harold Sackeim, Ph.D.

Michael Sacks, M.P.H.

Safa Saribeyoglu, M.D.

Richard S. Sauber, Ph.D.

Roy Schafer, Ph.D.

Jonah W. Schein, M.D.

Jesse Schomer, M.D.

Geri Ellen Schwartz, Ph.D.

Sally Severino, M.D.

Bonnie Jean Spring, Ph.D.

Leo Stone, M.D.

Milton Viederman, M.D.

Marvin Wasserman, M.D.

Martin S. Willick, M.D.

Sheldon Zimberg, M.D.

PSYCHIATRY 119

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Harvey Gurian. M.D., Toronto, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Larry Kenneth Brown. B.S., Maryland, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976 John E. Denny. Ph.D., Massachusetts, 1971 Charles J. Hudson. B.A., Princeton, 1959; M.D., McGill, 1963 Charles W. Lamb. Ph.D., Ohio State, 1966

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

William A. Ellis, Jr. B.A., Howard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Margaret M. Lawrence. B.A., Cornell, 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1940

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Seymour Gers. B.S., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1956 Emery S. Hetrick. B.A., Ohio State, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1957 Austin Moore. B.S., Queens (New York), 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959 Peter H. Schween. M.D., Hamburg, 1955

Assistant Clinical Professors

Sumansiri Alahendra. M.B.B.S., Ceylon (Sri Lanka)

Irwin J. Averbach. B.S., Michigan, 1949; M.D., Buffalo, 1954

Stephen L. Bennett. B.S., Queens (New York), 1949; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Shale Brownstein. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1955; M.D., 1959

Carol Leal. B.S., Louisiana State, 1963; M.D., Howard, 1967

Milton Lee. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York Medical College, 1956

J. Trevor Undo. B.A., New York University, 1946; M.D., Lausanne, 1957

Sidney M. Lytton. B.A., Maryland, 1949; M.D., 1955

Gideon Nachumi. B.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1958 Raymond W. Ransom. B.S., Howard, 1962; M.D., 1967 Raymond Raskin. B.A., New York University, 1942; M.D., 1946 Philip Shapiro. B.S., Michigan, 1965; M.D., Illinois, 1969 Sady Sultan. M.D., Universidad Central de Venezuela Pauline E. Thompson. M.D., Howard, 1944 Robert L. Walton. M.B.B.S., Melbourne, 1966

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS {continued) SPECIAL LECTURER

PSYCHIATRY P^^^l^ P jhompson, M.D. Virginia N. Wilking, M.D.

Ellis B. Charles, M.D. ggrl G. Wright, M D

Agustin A. Gomez, M.D. LECTURER

Frederick E. Kahn, M.D. INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL Gladys Eqri M D

Kwang Chin Kim. M.D. PSYCHOLOGY

Carol Garmiza, Ph.D.

120 PSYCHIATRY

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Albert M. Bromberg. B.S., College of William and Mary, 1953; M.D., Duke, 1957 Daniel J. O'Connell. B.A., Fordham, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1961 Linus Root. B.S., Georgetown, 1953; M.D., 1957

Ronald Sorvino. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1954; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1958

LECTURER

Morton Friedman, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Clarice Kestenbaum. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1950; M.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Samuel E. Klagsbrun. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1955; B.R.E., Jewish

Theological Seminary, 1954; M.D. , Chicago Medical School, 1962 Gary Lee Lefer. B.S., Stanford, 1962; M.D., Georgetown, 1966 Adam Munz. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Shepard J. Kantor. B.A., Colby, 1965; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology

Harry Kissileff. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1962; Ph.D., 1966

Assistant Clinical Professors

Gail B. Allen. B.A., Wellesley, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961

Frederic A. Ailing. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Alex Caemmerer, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947

Irene Chiarandini. M.D. , Buenos Aires, 1963

Ralph Colp, Jr. B.A., Columbia. 1945; M.D., 1948

Kathleen Degan. B.A.. St. Joseph's (New York), 1967; M.D., Bologna, 1972

Paul Dince. M.D., New York University, 1948

Nathaniel Donson. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., New York University 1962

John A. Fogelman. B.A.. Columbia, 1959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1964 Leo Kron. M.D., British Columbia, 1971 David M. MacDonald. B.S., Oregon, 1945; M.D., Tufts, 1949 James M. McGowan. B.A., Notre Dame, 1960; M.D., Kentucky, 1964 Eugene Mahon. M.D., National (Ireland), 1964 John A. Milici. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Geneva (Switzerland). 1957 Howard Millman. B.A., Cornell, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1969 Paul William Nassar. B.A., New York University 1963; M.D.. Rome, 1968 Kenneth Porter. B.A., Harvard, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1969 Harry R. Potter. B.S., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia 1962 Stephen P. Reibel. B.A., Harvard 1957; M.D., 1961

PSYCHIATRY 121

John W. Rosenberger. B.A., Dartmouth, 1956; M.D.C.M., McGill, 1960

Sirgay Sanger. B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., 1960

George Satran. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

Robert D. Scharf. B.S., Union, 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1970

Eleanor Schuker. B.A., Swarthmore, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

William M. Tucker. B.A., Harvard, 1962; M.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Ira B. Silverstein. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1964

Howard K. Welsh. B.S., City College, 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971

Harvey L. White. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., New York Medical College, 1964

C. Philip Wilson. B.A., Yale, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Scott Baum. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1971; Ph.D., City University of New York, 1977

Philip M. Bromberg. B.A., New York University, 1973; Ph.D., 1967

Susan Winship Coates. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1962; M.A., Vassar, 1968; Ph.D., New York

University, 1976 Barbara R. Cohn. B.A., Indiana, 1965; Ph.D., New York University, 1974 James D. Meltzer. B.A., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., New York University, 1973

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

William H. Brownlee, M.D. Lucy E. Collins, M.D. Stephen C. Glassberg, M.D. Sonia W. Hyman, M.D. Ernesto Lozano, M.D. Arthur M. Periman, M.D. Barbara R. Rosenfeld, M.D. Mitchell S. Rosenthal, M.D. William D. Wheat, M.D. Alexander V. Voitaskevsky, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Blanche Glass, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Peter Aldin, M.D. Salvador Eduoardo Algaze,

M.D. Cyrus Aroomlooi, M.D. Michael E. Barberie, M.D. Charles Lee Bell, M.D. Kenneth M. Berc, M.D. Arline C. Caldwell, M.D. William J. Crowley, M.D. Victor D'Arc, M.D. Leonard Deutsch, M.D. Laura Duval, M.D. Osvaldo J. Evangelista,

M.D. Bruce W. Fader, M.D. Harold H. Fogelman, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Joanne Leslie Foster, M.D. Maurice Haberman, M.D. Charles L. Ihlenfeld, M.D. Charles G. Jackson, Jr.,

M.D. David K. Jordan, M.D. Kenneth R. Jungblut, M.D. Willard S. Kahn, M.D. Robert J. Kent, M.D. llene Kochen, M.D. Marvin Roy Kremberg,

M.D. Woon Soon Lee, M.D. Enrique Madriga-Segura,

M.D. Henry Clay Mallard, M.D. Donald Mayerson, M.D. Jefrey R. Nurenberg, M.D. Henry A. Paul, M.D. Michael W. Pawel, M.D. Antonio G. Pena, M.D. Michael Piercey, M.D. Arthur S. Piatt, D.O. Ellen M. Piatt, D.O. Corey Niles Rigberg,

M.D. Maria Rodriguez-Boulan,

M.D. Jonathan E. Rosenfeld,

M.D. George Edward Rowan,

M.D. Jeffrey H. Sacks, D.O. Ranja Katerina Schildt,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Mona Schneider, M.D. Christin M. Sekaer, M.D. Jane Simon, M.D. Melvin L. Thrash, M.D. Joel Tricarico, M.D. Martha C. Troutman, M.D. Maria C. L. Velez, M.D. Joel Wallack, M.D. David S. Weinberger,

M.D. Olin West, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Robert C. Cutick, Ph.D. Andrew B. Druck, Ph.D. Ruth Wallach Mollod, Ph.D. Joan Schaeffer, Ph.D. Susan Butler See, Ph.D. Roy Shapiro, Ph.D. Michael Stern, M.A.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Rhoda M. Krawitz, Ph.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Hanne E. Favelukes, M.D. Shirin Ghaemmaghami, M.D. Edward E. Gilmour, M.D. Joel Gonchar, M.D. Alan Kouzmanoff, M.D. John M. W. Nicholson, M.D.

122 PSYCHIATRY PUBLIC HE^Lf H

ASSISTANTS {continued) ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL LECTURERS

Harvey Y. Sakofsky, M.D. PSYCHOLOGY j^^^^ j (3^,35^, M.D.

Pellegrino J. Sarti, M.D. Joa" M. Yager, Ph.D. John L. Schimel, M.D.

Keith Sedlacek M^D. gp^^,^^ LECTURERS

Victor Syrmis, M.D. , , ^ ., r^

Nestor J. Totero, M.D. ;'°^'lf ?*T* '^.Pr,

Charles F. Yackulic,, M.D. Lilli C. Shalsa, M.D.

Public Health

Joseph R. Delamar Professor of Public Health Practice, Dean and Chairman

Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine) (also Psychiatry). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Biostatistics

Professors

Joseph L. Fleiss (Division Head). B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.S., 1961; Ph.D., 1967 John Van Ryzin. B.S., Marquette, 1957; M.S., 1959; Ph.D., Michigan State, 1964

Adjunct Professor

Carl H. Erhardt. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1941; M.P.A., New York University, 1957; M.S., Harvard, 1958; D.Sc., 1962

Associate Professor

Agnes P. Berger. Ph.D., Budapest, 1939; M.A., Columbia, 1944

Senior Research Associate

Neal W. Chilton. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; D.D.S., New York University, 1942; M.P.H., Columbia, 1946

Assistant Professors

Robert R. Golden. B.S., California Institute of Technology 1960; M.S., Oregon State, 1963;

Ph.D., Minnesota, 1976 Patrick Shrout (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., St. Louis, 1972; Ph.D., Chicago, 1976 Sylvan Wallenstein. B.S., City College, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Sol Blumenthal. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.B.A., New York University,

1958; Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1969 Joseph Breuer. M.D., Vienna, 1937; M.P.H., Columbia, 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D., 1969 Neil Jay Risch (in Psychiatry). B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1972; M.S., Illinois,

1977; Ph.D., California, 1979 Donald C. Ross. B.A., Rochester, 1955; M.A., North Carolina, 1957; Ph.D., 1960 Martin Schnall. B.A., Yeshiva, 1955; M.S., Columbia, 1957; M.B.A., New York University,

1974; Ph.D., American International, 1978

PUBLIC HEALTH 123

Assistant Professor of Clinical Public Health

Bruce Levin (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.A., Harvard, 1972; Ph.D., 1974

INSTRUCTORS Carol A. Bodian, M.S. Frieda Nelson, B.A. Alex Tytun, Dr.P.H.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Molly Park, M.A. Livia R. Turgeon, M.S.

Environmental Sciences

LECTURERS

Allen S. Ginsburg, Ph.D.

Frieda Nelson, B.A.

Professors

Dezider Grunberger (also Biochemistry) (in the Institute of Cancer Research). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; Sc.D., 1968

1. Bernard Weinstein (Division Head) (also Medicine) (in the Cancer Center). B.S., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., 1955

Associate Professor

Jeanne M. Stellman. B.S., City College, 1968; Ph.D., 1972

Senior Research Associate

Granville H. Sewell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; Ph.D., 1966

Assistant Professors

Paul N. Borsky. B.A., Brooklyn, 1942

Alan M. Jeffrey (also Pharmacology). B.S., Hull (England), 1966; Ph.D., North Wales, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joseph L. Crumrine. B.S., Illinois, 1942; M.D., 1945

Frederica P. Perera. B.A., Radcliffe, 1963; M.P.H., Columbia, 1976; Dr.P.H, 1981

Assistant Professor of Clinical Public Health

Maurice E. Goldman. B.A., Princeton, 1951; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1955

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Leslie R. Andrews, M.A. Gloria C. Gordon, Ph.D.

LECTURERS

Allan H. Conney, Ph.D. Jean B. Cropper, M.P.H. Michael McCann, Ph.D.

LECTURERS (continued} Dhs T. Shen, Ph.D. Charles S. Warren, J.D. Jacqueline M. Warren, J.D.

Epidemiology

Professors

Bruce P. Dohrenwend (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.A., 1951; Ph.D., Cornell,

1955 Zena A. Stein (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Cape Town, 1941; M.A., 1942; B.Ch.,

Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950 Mervyn W. Susser (Sergievsky Professor). M.B.B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950

124 PUBLIC HEALTH

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner. B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Associate Professors

Bernard Challenor (Acting Division Head). B.A., Hunter, 1957; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1961 W. Allen Hauser (also Neurology) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Western Reserve, 1958;

M.D., St. Louis, 1962 David Rush (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959 Elmer Struening. B.S, Hastings, 1949; M.S., Purdue, 1951; Ph.D., 1967

Adjunct Associate Professors

Patricia R. Cohen. B.A., Hamline, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1968 Holger H. Hansen. M.D., Freie Universitat (Berlin), 1961; M.P.H, Columbia, 1967; Dr.P.H, 1973

Senior Research Associates

Lillian M. Belmont (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Brooklyn, 1947; M.A., College of the City of New York, 1949; Ph.D., New York University, 1957; M.S., Columbia, 1970

Inge F. Goldstein. B.A., Wellesley, 1951; M.S. Pittsburgh, 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1968; Dr.P.H, 1976

Assistant Professors

Ora S. Fagan. B.A., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1961; M.S.W., California (Berkeley), 1965;

D.S.W., 1973 Bruce G. Link. B.A., Earlham, 1971; Ph.D., Columbia, 1980 Nigel S. Paneth (also Pediatrics) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D.,

Harvard, 1972; M.P.H, Columbia, 1978 Ruth Ottman (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1975; Ph.D., 1980 Stephen Shafer (also Neurology) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D.,

Columbia, 1970; M.P.H., 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Ann B. Goodman. B.A., Radcliffe, 1953; M.A., George Washington, 1963; M.S., Columbia,

1972 Paul S. May. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1951; M.S., Syracuse, 1952; D.Sc,

Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1955; M.P.H, Columbia, 1970 Gregory L. Muhlin. B.A., City College, 1968; M.A., John Jay College, 1972; Ph.D., City

University of New York, 1978; M.S., Columbia, 1981

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE STAFF ASSOCIATES

Robert Lubin, M.P.H., Ph.D. Stephanie M. Duberman, M.D., M.P.H.

Mary J. Murphy, M.D.

Health Administration

Professors

Lowell E. Bellin. B.S., Yale, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1951;

M.P.H, Harvard, 1964 Lucie S. Kelly (also Nursing). B.S.N., Pittsburgh, 1947; M.Litt., 1957; Ph.D., 1965 Samuel Wolfe. M.D., Toronto, 1950; M.P.H, Columbia, 1960; Dr.P.H, 1961

PUBLIC HEALTH 125

Adjunct Professors

Arne C. Barkhaus (Public Health Practice). B.A., Copenhagen, 1926; M.D., 1933; D.P.H.,

Johns Hopkins, 1938 Joseph V. Terenzio. BA., Yale, 1939; J.D., Fordham, 1947; M.S., Columbia, 1954

Clinical Professor

Arthur Manoharan (at Harlem Hospital) . M.B.B.S., Madras, 1951; Dr.P.H., Columbia, 1960

Associate Professor

Bernard Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961; M.P.H., Harvard, 1963

Associate Professor of Clinical Public Health

Stephen N. Rosenberg. B.A.,Cornell, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967; M.P.H, Harvard, 1969

Adjunct Associate Professors

Noreen M. Clark. B.S., Utah, 1965; M.A., Columbia, 1972; Ph.D., 1976

Harold Fruchtbaum (History and Philosophy of Public Health). B.C.E., New York University,

1955; M.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1956; Ph.D., Harvard, 1964 Lloyd F. Novick. B.A., Colgate, 1961; M.D., New York University 1965; M.P.H, Yale,

1971 Irving S. Shapiro (Public Health Education). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1938;

M.S., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1954

Assistant Professors

Fred Goldman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1967; M.A., Brown, 1970; Ph.D., City College,

1975 Sheila A. Gorman. B.S., R.N., Niagara, 1959; M.P.H, Columbia, 1972 Marcia L. Pinkett-Heller. B.A., Howard, 1963; M.P.H, Michigan, 1970 Ralph Joseph Ullman. B.A., Cornell, 1970; M.B.A., Rochester, 1972; M.S., 1979

Assistant Professors of Nursing

Melanie Dreher. B.S.N. , Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1977

Lois A. Grau. fi5.A^., Marquette, 1968; M.S., Wisconsin, 1976; Ph.D., 1979

Assistant Clinical Professor

John Anthony Benvenuto, Jr. M.D., New York Medical College, 1968

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Raymond S. Alexander. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.B.A., 1954; M.S., Columbia, 1956 John Baer. B.A., Oberlin, 1959; M.S., Columbia, 1961; D.P.A., New York University,

1967 Arlene Bregman. B.A., State University of New York (Albany), 1971; M.P.H., Columbia,

1975 Annette Choolfaian. B.S., Bridgeport, 1964; M.P.A., New York University, 1972

126 PUBLIC HEALTH

Anita Stiles Curran. B.A., Connecticut, 1951; M.D., New York Medical College, 1955;

M.P.H., Columbia, 1974 Harriet S. Goldman (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., New York University, 1962;

D.D.S., 1965;M.P.H., Columbia, 1966 Nancy Graham (Health Administration). B.S., Columbia, 1956; M.A., New York University,

1960;M.P.H., Columbia, 1972; Dr.P.H., 1976 William H. Hermann. B.S., Missouri, 1951; M.S., Yale, 1953 Nicholas Herskovits. B.B.A., Bernard Baruch School of Business and Public Administration,

1963 Henry R. Karpe. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.S., Wisconsin, 1972 Nicetas H. Kuo (Public Health Practice). B.A., San Francisco State, 1954; M.A., 1956;

Ed.D., Columbia, 1965 W. David Latham. B.S., Stanford, 1966; M.B.A., 1968 Robert M. Lewy. B.A., Rochester, 1967; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine, 1971;

M.P.H., Columbia, 1976 Francis C. Lindaman. B.A., Gettysburg, 1935; M.A., 1936 William L. Nute, Jr. B.A., Swarthmore, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943 P. Bertram Phillips (Public Health Practice). B.A., San Francisco State, 1954; M.A., 1956;

Ed.D., Columbia, 1965 Arnold E. Rosenblum. B.A., Brooklyn, 1947; J.C, New York University, 1950; M.S.,

Columbia, 1964 Eleanore Rothenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; M.P.A., New York University, 1969; Ph.D.,

1975 Esther A. Schisa (Public Health Practice). B.S., Syracuse, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1955 Sheila M. Smythe. B.S., Creighton, 1952; M.S., Columbia, 1956 Boris A. Vanadzin. M.D., Munich, 1955; M.P.H., California (Berkeley), 1959 Michael L. Ziegler. B.A., State University of New York (Albany), 1972; J.D., State

University of New York (Buffalo), 1976

Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatrics

Shirley A. Mayer. B.A., Hunter, 1940; M.D., Chicago, 1943; M.P.H., Columbia, 1964

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Everett D. Hines, M.S.

INSTRUCTORS Stephen Banks, M.D. Peter D. Bardax, J.D. Wilene Carr, M.P.H. Barbara S. Cooper, M.D. Marjorie A. Costa,

M.P.H. Catherine D. Crone, M.D. Neal A. Denby, D.M.D.,

M.P.H. Michael Goldfarb, M.S. Ruth Haase, M.A. Margaret L. Haynes,

M.P.H. Steven Karten, M.B.A. Dulcy B. Miller, M.S. Thomas A. Sherwood,

M.P.H. Virginia K. Stowe, M.S.

SPECIAL LECTURERS Gloria L.A. Dammann,

M.P.H. Elinor F. Downs, M.P.H. Beatrice Mintz, M.P.H.

LECTURERS

Kenneth Adamec, M.S. George H. Adams, M.S. Frederick D. Alley, M.S. Allan C. Anderson, M.H.A. Lenore M. Appenzeller,

R.N., M.P.S. Peter Baglio, Sc.M. Richard A. Berman,

M.B.A., M.H.A. Robert L. Boyar,

B.Arch. Carlos J. Caguiat, M.P.H. Irene Clark, M.P.H. Alvin J. Conway, M.S.

LECTURERS {continued) Daniel L. Drosness,

M.P.H. Gary M. Eidsvold, M.D. Yehudi M. Felman, M.D. Andrew C. Fleck, Jr.,

M.D. Thomas J. Foley, M.S. Stephen L. Forstenzer,

M.S. Nicholas Freudenberg,

Dr.P.H. Herbert M. Friedman,

M.B.A. Bernard Fuss, M.S. Robert Galton, Ph.D. Gary Gambuti, M.P.A. Terrance E. Gardet,

M.P.H. Edward V. Grant

PUBLIC HEALTH 127

LECTURERS {continued) Margaret M. Griesmer,

B.S. Margaret T. Grossi, M.D. Anne C. Hargreaves, M.S. David Harris, M.D. Frank W. Hays, M.B.A. Robert E. Heinlein, M.S. Florence Kavaler, M.D. John T. Kolody, M.S. Elaine Lugovoy, M.A. Robert Markovitz, M.S. Lawrence E. McDevitt, B.A. Mary C. McLaughlin, M.D. Charles H. Meyer, M.S.

LECTURERS (continued) Anthony C. Mustalish, M.D. Janet M. Nakushian, M.A. Karl E. Nelson, M.S. Margaret J. O'Brien,

M.P.H. Donna O'Hare, M.D. Jean Pakter, M.D. George W. Parsons, M.S. Clarence E. Pearson, M.S. Richard H. Perry, M.S. Olive E. Pitkin, M.D. Peter Rogatz, M.D. Edward J. Rosasco, Jr.,

M.B.A.

LECTURERS (continued)

Alan H. Rosenblut,

M.B.A. Hana Rostain, M.D. Rachel Rotkovitch, Ph.D. Harvey Schoenfeld,

M.B.A. Joseph Sherber, M.S. Elliot J. Simon, M.S. Thomas J.G. Tighe,

M.P.H. Margaret E. Walsh,

M.Litt.

Population and Family Health

Professor

Allan G. Rosenfield (Division Head) (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Professors of Clinical Public Health

John A. Ross (in the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). B.A.

Ottawa, 1956; M.A., Yale, 1957; Ph.D., 1961 Giorgio R. Solimano (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D., Chile, 1960 Joe D. Wray. B.A., Stanford, 1947; M.D., 1952; M.P.H., North Carolina, 1967

Associate Professors

Nicholas Cunningham (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1955;

Dr.P.H, 1976 Susan G. Philliber. B.A., Florida State, 1965; M.S., 1966; Ph.D., 1968

Adjunct Associate Professors

John Bongaarts. M.D., Eindhoven Institute of Technology (The Netherlands), 1968; Ph.D.,

Illinois, 1972 Thomas Frejka. Engineer, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1966

Associate Professors of Clinical Public Health

Martin L. Gorosh. B.A., Brooklyn, 1959; M.P.H, Johns Hopkins, 1969; Dr.P.H, 1973 Stephen L. Isaacs. B.A., Brown, 1961; J.D., Columbia, 1956

Senior Research Associate

Walter B. Watson. B.A., Southern Methodist, 1953; M.S., Wisconsin, 1954; Ph.D., 1959

128 PUBLIC HEALTH

Assistant Professors

Katherine F. Darabi. B.A., Syracuse, 1969; M.S., Columbia, 1975; M.Phil, 1977; Ph.D.,

1980 Judith E. Jones. B.A., Hunter, 1956

Pearila Namerow. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1970; M.Phil., Columbia, 1974; Ph.D., 1976 William A. Van Wie. B.A., College of Wooster, 1961; B.D., Pittsburgh Seminary, 1964;

M.P.H., North Carolina, 1968, Dr.P.H., 1974 Maxine Weinstein (in the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). B.S.,

Antioch, 1969; M.A., Princeton, 1979; Ph.D., 1981

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Joy G. Dryfoos. B.A., Antioch, 1951; M.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1966

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rosemary Barber-Madden. B.A., Jersey City State College, 1968; M.S., Hunter, 1977;

Ed.D., Temple, 1980 Linda A. Randolph. B.S., Howard, 1962; M.D., 1967; M.P.H., California (Berkeley), 1971

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE LECTURERS

Henry G. Elkins, Jr., Ph.D. Michele Shedlin, M.A. Roy E. Brown, M.P.H.

Donald Lauro, Ph.D. Richard C. Friedman, M.D.

Norman L. Weatherby, STAFF ASSOCIATES Donald W. Helbig, M.D.

M.A. Elizabeth K. Kellner, M.P.H.

Eugene M. Weiss, Ph.D. Maudene Nelson, M.S.

(Institute of Human

Nutrition)

Sociomedical Sciences

Professors

Jack Elinson. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., George Washington,

1946 Denise B. Kandel (in Psychiatry). B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.A., Columbia, 1953; Ph.D.,

1960

Associate Professor

John L. Colombotos. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.A., 1952; Ph.D., Michigan, 1961

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Ruth G. Bennett. B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Senior Research Associates

Ann F. Brunswick. B.A., Hunter, 1946; M.A., Clark, 1947

Paul W. Haberman. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1948; M.B.A., New York University, 1961

Mata K. Nikias. D.D.S, Athens (Greece), 1953; M.P.H., Columbia, 1960; Ph.D., 1967

Assistant Professor

Lawrence Krasnoff. B.A., City College, 1969; Ph.D., City University of New York, 1979

PUBLIC HEALTH 129

Assistant Professors of Anthropology

Leith P. Mullings. B.S., Cornell, 1966; M.A., Chicago, 1970; Ph.D., 1975 Robert F. Wasserstrom. B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.A., 1973; Ph.D., 1977

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Sciences

Carol C. Schwartz. B.S., Columbia, 1962; M.S.N., Yale, 1965; M.Phil., 1967; Ph.D., 1969

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Sally Guttmacher. B.S., Wisconsin, 1963

Matthew A. Rosen. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., 1969; M.Phil., 1975; Ph.D., 1979

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATES

Stanley Fisher, M.S. (continued) p^^^ ^ Messeri, M.Phil.

Corinne Kirchner, M.Phil. Carole S. Vance, Ph.D. Victoria Raveis, M.P.H.

Athilia E. Siegmann, M.S. Carmen N. Velez-Santori,

M.Phil.

Tropical Medicine

Professors

Dickson D. Despommier (Parasitology) (also Microbiology). B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962;

M.S., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., Notre Dame, 1967 Michael Katz (also Pediatrics). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963 Roger W. Williams (Medical Entomology). B.S., Illinois, 1939; M.S., 1941; Ph.D., Columbia,

1947

Associate Professor

Philip A. D'Alesandro (Division Head) (Parasitology) (also Microbiology). B.S., Rutgers, 1952; M.S., 1954; Ph.D., Chicago, 1958

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ashton C. Cuckler (Parasitology). B.A., Nebraska, 1935; M.A., 1936; Ph.D., Minnesota,

1941 John D. Frame. B.A., Wheaton, 1938; M.D., Northwestern, 1943

Assistant Professor

Susanne Holmes Giannini (Parasitology) (also Microbiology). B.A., New York University, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professor

Martin G. Blechman. B.S., George Washington, 1949; M.S., Columbia, 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

Kathleen L. Miller. B.A., Wisconsin, 1971; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1977

INSTRUCTOR

Chung C. Wang, M.D.

130 PUBLIC HEALTH RADIOLOGY

Faculty Members Not Affiliated with Specific Divisions

Professor

Sami A. Hashim (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Beirut, 1950; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Adjunct Professor

Myron Brin (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Cornell, 1947; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1951

Assistant Professor

S. Jaime Rozovski (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). B.S., Chile, 1969; M.S., Columbia, 1971; Ph.D., 1977

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Vicki R. Ashton, M.S.W.

Radiology

James Picker Professor and Chairman

David H. Baker. M.D., Boston, 1951

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Philip O. Alderson. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1966; M.D., 1970

Walter E. Berdon. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., 1955

Chu Huai Chang. M.D., St. John 's (Shanghai), 1944

Zang-Hee Cho (Physics). B.S., Seoul National (Korea), 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D., Upsala,

1966 Kent Ellis. M.D., Yale, 1950

Eric J. Hall (Physics). D.Phil., Oxford, 1962; D.Sc., 1978 Sadek Hilal. M.D., Cairo, 1955 Harald H. Rossi (Physics). Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borek. B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weizmann Institute (Israel), 1967

Professors of Clinical Radiology

Frieda Feldman. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., 1957 Donald L. King. B.A., Stanford, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Ralph Schlaeger. B.S, Wisconsin, 1942; M.D., 1945

Adjunct Professors

Victor P. Bond (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1943; M.D., California

(San Francisco), 1945; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1952 Simon Larach. Ph.D., Princeton, 1955

RADIOLOGY 131

Associate Professors of Clinical Radiology

Thane Asch. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955 John H. Austin. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Yale, 1965

Rashid Fawwaz. M.D., American (Beirut), I960; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1968 Monique C. Katz. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963 Eric C. Martin. B.A., Oxford, 1963; M.A., 1967; M.D., St. Thomas (London), 1967 Edward L. Nickoloff. B.S., Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1965; M.S., New Hampshire, 1968; Sc.D., Johns Hopkins, 1977

Adjunct Associate Professor

Lawrence A. Shepp. B.S., Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, 1958; M.A., Princeton, 1960; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Joan Eliasoph. B.A., Hunter. 1946; M.D., New York University, 1949 Sundara R. Ganti. M.B.B.S., Guntur Medical College (India), 1967; M.D., 1967 Kevin L. Macken. M.D., National (Ireland), 1947 Paul Sane. M.D., Bucharest, 1950

Senior Research Associate

Charles R. Geard (Radiation Biophysics). B.A.S., Melbourne, 1960; M.Sc, Tasmania, 1969; Ph.D., Australian National, 1973

Assistant Professors

Andrew Arthur Maudsley. B.S.C, Nottingham, 1973; Ph.D., 1976 Richard C. Miller. B.A., Iowa, 1969; M.S, 1972; Ph.D., 1976

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Benjamin Bashist. B.S., Brooklyn, 1972; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1975

Kaaren N. Bergquist. B.S., Wisconsin State, 1962; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1968

Radovan Bubanj. M.D., Zagreb (Yugoslavia), 1973

Peter D. Esscr (Radiation Biophysics). B.A.. Brown, 1961; M.S.. Adelphi, 1964; Ph.D.,

1971 Elliott Fanchuken. B.A.. New York University, 1974; M.D., State University of New York

(Buffalo), 1975 Karen S. Fountain. B.A., Northern State College (South Dakota), 1968; M.D., Maryland,

1972 Susan Frank. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1977 Hsin Min Kuan. B.S.. National Taiwan. 1956; M.S., Hsing-Hua (Taiwan), 1958; M.D.. Rice,

1961; Ph.D., 1963 Arthur Liskow. B.S.. Cincinnati, 1963; M.D., 1967 Michael E. Mawad. M.D., French University (Beirut), 1976 Richard Neff. B.A., New College (Florida), 1972; M.D., Illinois, 1977 Elizabeth W. O'Connell. B.A., New York University 1973; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1976 William H, Perman. B.S., Lewis and Clark, 1973; M.S.. Portland State, 1974; Ph.D.,

Wisconsin, 1980 Haren Rupani. M.D., All-India Institute of Medical Science, 1974

132 RADIOLOGY

David W. Seldin. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968; M.S., Colorado, 1970;

M.D., New York University, 1975 Lorraine G. Shapeero. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1964; M.D., California (San Francisco),

1968 Alan J. Silver. B.A., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Rochester, 1973 Rolando D. Singson. B.S., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1965; M.D., 1970 Theodore Sheng-Tao Wang. Ph.D., Maryland, 1964

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S, Miami (Florida), 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Bruce J. Biavati (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.A., 1955; Ph.D., 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Harry Agress, Jr. B.A., Tufts, 1968; M.D., 1972

David A. Follett. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1954

Shelby J. Galloway. B.A., Catawba, 1961; M.D., Bowman-Gray, 1965

William M. Griffin. B.S., Notre Dame, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1962 Harvey L. Hecht. B.A., Amherst, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Steven D. Richman. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971 Robert Silbey. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Richard P. Bird, Ph.D. Michael L. Freeman, Ph.D. Paul Goldhagen, Ph.D. Paul J. Kliauga, Ph.D. Stephen Marino, M.S. Marco Zaider, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN RADIOLOGY Allan B. Rubin, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY

Gregory M. Carsen, M.D. Rosendo Diaz, M.D. Barbara Edelstein, M.D. Alan Kalischer, M.D. Madhuri Kirpekar, M.D. Steven Kroop, M.D. Charles Lanzieri, M.D. Daniel S. Levy, M.D. Robin Mitnick, M.D. Ahalya Premkumar, M.D. Louis E. Rambler, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Joel M. Rosen, M.D. Pramila Tiwari, M.D. Arthur S. Weisel, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Howard E. Simon, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE Rudolph Gand

LECTURER

Richard Palmer Gold, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Harry Rodman Hartman. M.D., Yale, 1959

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Stephen W. Nagy. Ph.D., Connecticut, 1959

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY

Rajendrakumar Dalai, M.D. Robert D. Henretig, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Jeffrey A. Levy, M.D. Katherine Lloyd, M.D. Peter T. Wright, M.D.

RADIOLOGY 133

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Thodore R. Stent. B.A., Talladega, 1944; M.D., Meharry, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Jeanne Armstrong. B.A., Mount Holy oke, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Christopher A. Johnson. B.A., Howard, 1943; M.D., 1947

Laurencia B. Regalado. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1957

Fred Van Natta. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1964; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1968

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alice N. Francisco. A.A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1956; M.D.. 1961 Lawrence C. Roach. B.A., Saskatchewan (Canada), 1958; M.D., 1960 Yuthana Samroengraja. M.D., Chulongkorn Hospital Medical School. 1965 Abdulhamid R. Vazir. M.D., Bombay, 1942

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

RADIOLOGY Chomyong K. Charoenkul, M.D.

Muhammad Anwar, M.D., B.S. Gilles M. Hendrick, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Assistant Professor of Clinical Radiology

David L. Bloom. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., Tufts, 1955

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors of Clinical Radiology

Richard D. Kittridge. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954 Guy D. Potter. M.D., Chicago, 1956; B.Sc, 1957

Clinical Professors

Kuo-York Chynn. B.S, National Tung-Chi (Shanghai). 1945; M.D.. 1949; M.S. St. Louis,

1954 Virginia Kanick. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D.. Columbia. 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Jeanne W. Baer. B.S., Connecticut. 1960; M.D.. Columbia, 1964 John T. Hsu. M.D., National Defense (Taiwan), 1957 Leonard M. Liegner. B.A., New York University. 1941; M.D., 1944 Efthimios C. Spyropoulos. M.D., Athens, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Carol L. Hilfer. B.A.. Barnard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971 Anita G. Moallem. B.S., Brooklyn, 1960; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964

134 RADIOLOGY REHABILITATION MEDICINE

William I. Shaw. B.A.. Washington and Jefferson, 1958: M.D., Pittsburgh, 1962 Alvaro Vallejo. M.D.. Del Valle (Colombia), 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Ina A. Altman. B.S., Brooklyn. 1956; M.D., Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1960 Frank M. Dain. B.A., Dartmouth, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1945 David S. Marsden. Ph.D., Jefferson, 1968 Harold L. Stitt. B.A., Colorado, 1953; M.D., 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS [continued] INSTRUCTORS (continued)

RADIOLOGY Hi-Jung Pyun, M.D. Susan M. Tuck, M.D.

Manoochehr Abiri, M.D. Sabino J. Rizzo, M.D. Peter K. Yeung, M.D.

Sidney D. Bogart, M.D. Kenneth T. Rogers, D.O.

Sidney Gentin, M.R.C.P.E. Theodora Serban, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Paul Khoury, M.D. Morris Hodara, M.S.

Rehabilitation Medicine

Simon Baruch Professor and Chairman

John A. Downey. M.D., Manitoba, 1954; D.Phil., Christ Church (Oxford). 1962; F.R.C.P.

At Presbyterian Hospital

Associate Professor

Lucien J. Cote (also Neurology). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954

Associate Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Erwin G. Gonzalez. B.A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1962; M.D., 1967 Stanley J. Myers. B.A., New York University, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961

Senior Research Associate

Leon T. Kremzner. Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Larry J. Crawshaw (also Pharmacology). B.A., California. 1964; Ph.D.. 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors

Cayetano C. Co. A.A., Santo Tomas, 1949; M.D.. 1954

Antonio Cocchiarella. M.D., Bari (Italy), 1953

Francis J . Foca . B.S. Fordham. 1 95 7; M. D. , Bologna (Italy), 1 966

Carolina O. McCagg. B.A., Barnard. 1962; M.D., Yale. 1966

Jay S. Mendelson. B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1975; M.D., Jefferson, 1977

Jonathan R. Moldover. B.A., Trinity (Connecticut), 1970; M.D.. Columbia. 1974

Damyanti G. Moorjani (also Pediatrics). B.S.. Bombay. 1953; M.D., Grant (Bombay), 1957

Naomi L. Turner. B.A., San Francisco Xavier (Bolivia), 1948; M.D., 1956

REHABILITATION MEDICINE 135

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Alfred Hess, D.O. Charles R. Marshall, M.D. Anthony V. Porcelli, M.D. Robert Stone, M.S. (at

Blythedale Children's

Hospital)

ASSOCIATES (continued)

Kathleen R. Watson, M.B.B.S.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Adrienne Falk Bergen, B.A. C.P.T. (at Blythedale Children's Hospital)

Glenn F. Hutnick, B.A.

INSTRUCTORS [continued)

Robert J. Mitchell

Patricia A. Richards, M.D. (at Blythedale Children's Hospital)

STAFF ASSOCIATE

Daniel Eugene Lemons, M.S.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Albert D. Anderson (A. David Gurewitsch Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Harvard, 1952

Associate Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Herbert L. Thornhill. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1951; M.D., Howard, 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Yasoma B. Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1963

Assistant Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Lucille C. Gunning (in Pediatrics). B.A., New York University, 1945; M.D., Woman 's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professor

Wanda Brodzka. M.D., Academy of Medicine (Warsaw), 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Louise Weiss, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Thomas Abraham, M.B.B.S. Joseph A. Malloy, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Ivan T. Donev, M.D. Harriett Minor, M.A. Iluminado C. Nebab, M.D. Sandhya E. Zarapkar, Intermediate Sci.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Felicita E. Clare, B.S. Diane L. Waithe, M.A.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Arun Kuman Bhattacharyyan. Intermediate Sci.. Bangabasi (Calcutta), 1950; M.D., Nilratan

Sirca Medical College (Calcutta), 1955 Sally Wisely. B.A., Radcliffe, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1967

136 REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Assistant Clinical Professor

Rodolfo L. Reyes. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1952

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

PHYSICAL THERAPY REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Barbara D. Hanley, M.S. Wen-Ling L. Fan, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

John J. Kraus, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lucille T. Pai. M.D.. Woman's Christian Medical College (Shanghai). 1941

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Ravi Raj Malpe, M.B., B.S.

Occupational Therapy

Associate Professor

Barbara Neuhaus (acting director of program). B.A.. Keuka. 1950: O. T.R.. Columbia. 1952: M.A.. Columbia. I960: Ed.D.. 1980

Assistant Professors of Clinical Occupational Therapy

Adele C. Germaine. BA.. Connecticut College, 1969; M.S.. O. T.R.. Columbia. 1970 Gordon Williamson. B.A.. Emory, 1968; M.S., Columbia, 1970: M.Phil., 1976; Ph.D.. 1978

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Margaret Ann Brown. M.A. Janet Falk-Kessler, M.A. Laurelee Hawkins, B.S.

Simme Cynkin, M.S. Patricia A. Miller, M.A. Frances Kraver, B.S.

Schone Pang, M.S. Roberta Roth, M.S.W.

Physical Therapy

Associate Professors

Ruth Dickinson (director of program). B.S.. Russell Sage. 1944; M.A.. Columbia. 1947 Althea M. Jones. B.S.. Panzer College of Physical Education, 1944: M.A.. Columbia. 1972

Associate Professor of Clinical Physical Therapy

Bernadette Hecox. B.S., Columbia, 1968; M.A.. 1973

REHABILITATION MEDICINE SURGERY 137

Assistant Professor

Thomas J. Schmitz. B.S.. State University of New York (Buffalo). 1972; M.S.. Boston. 1974

Assistant Professor of Clinical Physical Therapy

Mary Joan Day. B.S.. St. Louis. 1961; M.S.. Pennsylvania, 1972

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Theodore Corbitt, M.A. Patricia Sullivan, M.A.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Margaret Beyda, B.S. Anne Hinricks, M.Ed. Marion Marx, M.A.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Georgia Reidel, B.S. Paul Ribera, M.A.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Linda Arslanian, B.S. Andre Deloya, B.A. Susan Makris Durfee, B.S. Ann B. Edgar, B.S.

ASSISTANTS {continued) Barbara Freeman, B.S. Pamela Harris, B.S. Cindy Hirsch, M.S. James Kruse, M.S. Lindi Oberon, B.S. Ellen O'Neill, M.A. Jeanine Paxton, B.S. Joan E. Thomas, B.S.

Surgery

Valentine Mott Professor and Johnson and Johnson Distinguished Professor and Chairman

Keith Reemtsma. B.S.. Idaho State. 1945; M.D.. Pennsylvania, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

R. Peter Altman (Schullinger Professor of Pediatric Surgery) (also Pediatrics). B.A.. Colgate,

1955; M.S.. Rochester. 1958; M.D.. New York Medical College, 1961 Frank Gump. B.A.. Harvard. 1951; M.D., New York University, 1955 David V. Habif (Morris and Rose Milstein Professor). B.S.. Columbia. 1936; M.D.. 1939 Mark A. Hardy. B.A.. Columbia. 1958; M.D.. Albert Einstein, 1962 Frederic P. Herter (Hugh Auchincloss Professor). B.A.. Harvard, 1941; M.D.. 1944 Thomas C. King. B.A.. Utah. 1950; M.D.. 1954; M.A., Missouri, 1963 John M. Kinney. B.A.. Denison, 1943; M.D., Harvard. 1946 John B. Price, Jr. M.A., Texas, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1950

Professor of Pathology

Soldano Ferrone. M.D.. Milan (Italy). 1964; Ph.D.. 1971

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Nicole Suciu-Foca. B.S.. Bucharest (Rumania), 1954; M.S.. 1960; Ph.D.. 1965

Professors of Clinical Surgery

Harold G. Barker. B.A.. Utah, 1939; M.D.. Pennsylvania, 1943

Frederick O. Bowman, Jr. B.A.. North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Pennsylvania. 1952

Bard Cosman (in Anatomy and Cell Biology). B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D.. 1955

138 SURGERY

Carl R. Feind. B.A., Texas, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1950

James R. Malm. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Alfred M. Markowitz. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1952 Arthur B. Voorhees, Jr. B.A., Virginia, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Clinical Professor

Bashir Ahmad Zikria. B.S., George Washington, 1954; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1958

Associate Professors

David Bregman. B.A., New York University, 1961, M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1965 Paul Lo Gerfo. B.S.. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1961; M.S., 1963; M.D., State

University of New York (Upstate), 1967 Henry M. Spotnitz. B.A., Harvard, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgery

Joseph A. Buda. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

Kenneth Forde. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Ivo P. Janecka. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1965

Alfred Jaretzki III. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., 1944

Frederick R. Randall. B.S, Howard, 1942; M.D., 1945

Francis C. Symonds, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert G. Bertsch. B.A., Carleton, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957

Charles W. Findlay. B.A., Yale, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

David M. Ju. M.D., National Medical College (Shanghai), 1944; Med.Sc.D., Columbia,

1954 Sven Kister. B.A., Dartmouth, 1955; M.D., Harvard, 1958 George C. Peck. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., Maryland, 1953 John N. Schullinger. B.A., Princeton, 1951: M.D., Columbia, 1955

Associate Professor of Clinical Dentistry

Steven Roser. B.A., Middlebury, 1964; D.M.D., Harvard 1968; M.D., 1972

Senior Research Associate in Biochemistry

David Elwyn. B.A.. Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

Mary H. McGrath. B.A.. New Rochelle, 1966; M.D., St. Louis, 1970

Roman Nowygrod. B.A.. Harvard, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Eric A. Rose. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975

Charles Stoler. B.A. Washington (St. Louis), 1970; M.D.. Georgetown, 1974

George J. Todd. B.S., lona. 1970; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1974

Collin J. Weber. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Irving Goodman. B.A., Colorado, 1939; Ph.D., 1944

SURGERY 139

Assistant Clinical Professors

Paul H. Gerst. B.A., Columbia. 1948; M.D., 1952

Leif O. Holgersen. B.A., Taylor, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry,

1965 Peter S. Liebert. M.D., Harvard, 1962

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Duncan L. McCollester,

Ph.D. Shanta M. Modak, M.D.,

Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Vincent W. Ansanelli, M.D. Robert G. Blabey, M.D. Harold M. Bruck, M.D. Sherman M. Bull, M.D. Howard Greisler, M.D. Leslie Mark Kutcher, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Mark David Sherman, M.D. Charles A. Slanetz, M.D. James S. Todd, M.D. Michael Treat, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Jerome Martin Dubroff,

M.D. Rita Lipton, B.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Narihito Kuromoto, M.D. Esther Meyer, M.A.

SPECIAL LECTURERS William A. Gardner, M.D. Thomas Santulli, M.D. Philip D. Wiedel, M.D.

LECTURERS

Shivaji B. Bhonslay, M.D.

George Escher, M.D.

WRITERIN-RESIDENCE Harry Schwartz, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgery

David A. Blumenstock. B.A.. Union (Schenectady), 1949; M.D.. Cornell. 1953

Clinical Professor

John E. Olson (in Urology). B.A.. Kansas, 1953; M.D.. 1956

Associate Clinical Professor

Rodman D. Carter (in Urology). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

James Bordley IV. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Patrick Allen Dietz. B.A., Holy Cross, 1966; B.M.ScL, Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard.

1970 Roger W. MacMillan III. B.S.. Trinity, 1961; M.D., Columbia. 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Edward J. Carey, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958 Webster J. Stayman. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1966; M.D., Jefferson, 1970

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Surgery

Barbara Barlow. B.A.. New York University, 1946; D.D.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1953 Harold P. Freeman. B.A., Catholic, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1958

140 SURGERY

Associate Clinical Professors

David M. Carberry. Ph.D., Providence, 1947; M.D., Jefferson, 1951

Harold A. Games. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1951

Robert F. Morton. M.D., Meharry, 1944

John W. Parker, Jr. B.A., Fisk, 1942; M.D., Meharry, 1945

Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology

Lee David Eisenberg. B.S., St. John 's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

Ganepola A. Ganepola. B.S., Kyoto, 1966; M.D., 1967 Mohamad H. Parsa. B.S, Tehran, 1957; M.D., 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

Salvatore G. Cinque. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.D., Loyola, 1946

Rajunder P. Gandhi. M.B.B.S., Institute of Medicine (Mandalay), 1966

James E.G. Norris. B.A., Hampton Institute, 1953; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1957

Ruben Oropeza. B.S., Mexico, 1948; M.D., 1955

Carlton E. Patrick. M.D., University of the Saar (Hamburg, Germany), 1957

Assistant Clinical Professor of Neurological Surgery

Robert W. Schick. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Matthew D. Branche, M.D. Urbano K. Guarin, M.D. Malcolm Moley, M.D. Pierre G. Van Bockstaele, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Deodatta V. Bendre, M.D. Alden G. Cockburn, M.D. Egel Francois, M.D. Robert Leon Gibson,

M.B.B.S. (Orthopedic

Surgery)

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Edoardo Giuliani, M.D. Robert W. Holtzman, M.D. Avtar S. Josen, M.D. Barnett Miller, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL NEUROSURGERY

George V. DiGiacinto, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

William L. King, M.D. Caleb Medley, M.D. Bruce P. Meinhard, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL OTOLARYNGOLOGY

Ellsworth Frye, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Rex O. Ajayi, M.D. Arthur Rouse, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY

Michael Rapak, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Roger Antoine, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery

Ames Lawrence Filippone. B.A., Cornell, 1950; M.D., 1953

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professor

Richard W. Brenner. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

SURGERY 141

Associate Clinical Professors

David Befeler. B.A.. Columbia, 1955: M.D.. 1959 Bruce J. Brener. B.A.. Yale. 1962; M.D.. Harvard. 1966 Robert Specht. B.A.. Princeton. 1944: M.D.. Columbia. 1946

Assistant Clinical Professors

John H. Cooper. B.S.. Lawrence. 1947: M.B.A.. Chicago. 1949: M.D.. 1954

Douglas M. Costabile. B.A., Muhlenberg. 1946: M.D.. Geneva. 1951

John Joseph Hudock. B.S.. Northwestern. 1944: M.D.. 1948

Daniel L. Moore. M.D.. Johns Hopkins. 1958

John V. Triolo. M.S.. Rochester. 1948: M.D., Long Island College of Medicine. 1941

Charles J. Wittmann. B.A.. Princeton. 1958: M.D.. Pennsylvania. 1962

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES (continued)

^^^^^'^^ Saverio J. Panzarino, M.D.

Robert E. Knapp, M.D. Morton Perkoff, M.D.

Thomas Logio, M.D. Jerome Spivack. M.D.

Charles Loguda, M.D. E Bruce Whitesell, M.D. Jerrold Lozner, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors of Clinical Surgery

J. William Littler. B.S.. Duke, 1938: M.D.. 1942

Richard B. Stark. B.A.. Stanford 1936: M.D.. Cornell, 1941

Walter Wichern. B.S.. Mount Union. 1942: M.D.. Harvard 1945

Clinical Professor

W. Graham Knox. B.A.. Columbia. 1939: M.D., 1942

Associate Professor

John G. Krai. M.A.. Goteberg (Sweden). 1961: M.D.. 1967: Ph.D.. 1976

Associate Professor of Microbiology

George A. Hashim. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard G. Eaton. B.S.. Franklin and Marshall. 1951; M.D., Pennsylvania. 1955

Joseph Ford. B.A.. Harvard 1942; M.D.. Columbia, 1945

George E. Green. B.S.. Yale. 1952: M.D.. 1956

John E. Hutchinson. B.S.. Moorehouse. 1953; M.D., Meharry, 1957

Robert E. McCabe. B.A., Williams. 1948: M.D.. Cornell, 1953

Robert E. Miller. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate). 1957 Howard R. Nay. B.A., Virginia Military Institute. 1952; M.D.. Columbia. 1956 James B. Rodgers. B.A.. Virginia, 1944; M.D., 1948 Edward G. Stanley-Brown. M.D.. Pennsylvania, 1948

142 SURGERY UROLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professors

Peter A. Bossart. B.A., Muhlenberg, 1947; M.D., Cornell, 1951 Thomas Dailey. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Cornell, 1961 Clayton R. DeHaan. B.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Robert T. Edmonds. B.A., Harvard, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951 Paul D. Harris. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Conrad G. Lattes. B.S., Swarthmore, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1963 James A. MacDonald. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1950 Haroutane A. Mekhjian. B.S., American (Beirut), 1961; M.D., 1965 Robert J. Mulcare. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961 Carl S. Oakman. B.A., Harvard 1938; M.D., Tufts, 1943 William G. Ramey. B.A., Virginia, 1970; M.D., 1973 James H. Terry, Jr. B.S., Arizona, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Chin Bor Yeoh. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SURGERY

Arnold H. Belgraier, M.D. Charles R. Blair, M.D. Gregory W. Brabbee, M.D. Peter B. Cinelli, M.D. Hirman Sedwick Cody III,

M.D. John F Crowe, M.D. Clarence A. Dunn, Jr.,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Peter B. Fodor, M.D. Philip E. Gordon, M.D. Joshua M, Kaplan, M.D. Richard H. Karpinski,

M.D. John J. Keyser, M.D. Farid J. Khoury, M.D. Dianne R. Lorieo, M.D. Stephen G. Lynn, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Richard A. Marks, M.D. Walter H. Stingle, M.D. Paul I. Tomljanovich,

M.D. Hiroshi Washio, M.D. George J. Zambetti, Jr.,

M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE Mikio Kamiyama, Ph.D.

Urology

John K. Lattimer Professor and Chairman

Carl A. Olsson. B.A., Bowdoin, 1959; M.D., Boston, 1963

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor of Clinical Urology

Ralph J. Veenema. B.A., Calvin, 1952; M.D., Jefferson, 1945

Associate Professors

Jerry G. Blaivas. B.A., Tuffs, 1964; M.D., 1968

Ralph De Vere White . B. Ch. , BAO., University College (Dublin), 1 964; M.D., 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Myron Tannenbaum. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D., 1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Urology

Peter J, Puchner. B.A., Carleton, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Nicholas A. Romas. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

UROLOGY 143

Associate Clinical Professors

Stanley B. Braham. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947 Frank W. Longo. B.S., Maryland, 1951; M.D., 1955

Myron S. Roberts. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1954

Assistant Professor

Harris M. Nagler. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1971; M.D., Temple, 1975

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Philip Tomashefsky. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistant Professors of Clinical Urology

John D. Birkoff. B.A.. Harvard 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Terry W. Hensle. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1964; M.D., Cornell, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professors

Elliot L. Cohen. B.A., New York University, 1963; M.D., Chicago, 1967

Peter N. De Sanctis. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1962

J. Timothy Donovan. M.D., New York Medical College, 1948

Louis J. Dougherty. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

John P. Grant. B.A., Amherst, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Michael H. Wechsler. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1961; M.D., St. Louis, 1965

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

Uf^OLOGY JohnKallos,B.Sc. Leonard J. Rudin, M.D.

Charles E. Umhey, Jr., M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Ralph Buttyan, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Richard Kroll, M.D.

At Mary Imogens Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor of Surgery

John E. Olson. B.A., Kansas, 1953; M.D., 1956

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL UROLOGY Rex O. Ajayi, M.D. (in Surgery) Bruce MacDonald, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert R. White. B.A., Amherst, 1949; M.D., Rochester, 1954

144 UR0LCX3Y

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Kenneth L. Day, M.D. Pascal A. Pironti, M.D.

ASSOCIATES [continued]

Joseph S. Ritter, M.D. Morey Wosnitzer, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Russell W. Lavengood, Jr. B.A., St. Joseph's (Indiana), 1947; M.D., Louisville, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Manuel Fernandez. M.D., Coimbra (Portugal), 1956

Perrin B. Snyder. B.S., New York University, 1929; M.D., 1933

Joseph N. Ward. M.B., B.Cb., University College (Dublin), 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

B.A., Williams, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1946

William J. Nelson. Robert D. Wickham

B.A., Drew, 1947; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1952

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Arumbi P. Subramaniam,

M.D. Pellegrino J. Tozzo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Philip C. Cea, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Harry S. David, M.D. Alfred F. Fretz, M.D. Waleed G. Maloof, M.D. Constantine Photos, M.D. Joseph D. Putignano, M.D. Alexander Sotiropoulos, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Rudolph D. Talarico, M.D. James W. Vastola, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL UROLOGY

Abas Rezvani, M.D. Damir Velcek, M.D.

'^r-'../, -' tv^"'u~:i^r\

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1982

Abrams, Elaine. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics

Absatz, Michael. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Surgery/

Orthopedics Adler, Frederick. University of California Affiliated Hospitals, Davis, California. Family

Practice Almquist, Robert. North Carolina Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Family

Practice Amchin, Jess. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Andrew, Susan. North Carolina Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Medi- cine Beekman, Karen. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Bellin, Eran Y. New England Center Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Bernstein, Guy T. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery/Urology Bezier, Jeffrey. Bryn Mawr Hospital/Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Oph- thalmology Birkenbach, Mark. University of Minnesota Hospitals, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Pathology Blades, Edmond. Case Western Reserve University Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. Medicine Boruchoff, Susan. George Washington University, Washington, D.C Medicine Brauser, Steven. Pacific Medical Center -Presbyterian Hospital, San Francisco, Califor- nia. Medicine/Anesthesiology Brenner, Gail. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics-Gynecology Brown, Florence. St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Bryk, Eli. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery /Orthopedics Buchness, Mary. Case Western Reserve University Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio Medicine Burns, Elisa. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics-Gynecology Cammisa, Frank P., Jr. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery /Orthope- dics Campbell, Susan. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Medicine/Psychiatry Cantor, Michael. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Cherup, Lori Lyn. Hospitals of the University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Sur- gery Clair, Darren. University of California Hospital, Los Angeles, California. Family Practice Clinton, Henry. St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Cody, William. University of Colorado Affiliated Hospital, Denver, Colorado. Surgery Cohen, Jeffrey. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Daly, James. St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Danso, Alex. New Rochelle Hospital, New Rochelle, New York. Medicine Dash, Greg. St. Luke's- Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Surgery/Ear, Nose, Throat del Alcazar, Carlos. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York.

New York. Medicine Delfs, Richard. Kaiser Foundation Hospital, Santa Clara, California. Medicine Deluty, Sheldon. St. Luke 's- Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. Medicine/Anesthesiology Derby, James. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Hanover, New Hampshire. Sur- gery/Ear, Nose, Throat Deri, John. University of California Hospitals, San Francisco, California. Neurosurgery Dermody, Terence. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine

148 FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1982

Devlin, Michael. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine/Psychiatry Downey, Susan. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadephia, Pennsylva- nia. Surgery Doyle, Werner. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. Surgery Easton, Jonathan. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Psychia- try Endow. Curtis. Virginia Mason Hospital, Shelton, Washington. Medicine Endrizzi, Donald. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery/Orthopedics Fabiano, Frederic. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Fiero, Thomas. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, Pennsylvania. Family Practice Formichella, Donna. New England Center Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Frank, David. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Psychiatry Gilchrist, Ian. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Gomez, William. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery /Orthopedics Grant, Gail. University of California Hospital (affiliated), Irvine, California. Internal Medi- cine Greenberg, Steven. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Griswold, Jonathan. McGaw Medical Center, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illi- nois. Flexible/Anesthesiology Harmon, Valerie. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Harrington, William. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pathology Hart, Craig. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Medicine/Radiology Honig, Peter. McGaw Medical Center, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois. Medi- cine Hutt, Douglas. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Jabs, Kathy. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Jackness, Emily. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Karasik, Pamela. George Washington University Hospital, Washington, D.C Medicine Kates, Mandes. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery/Ophthalmology Kessler, Paul. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Kim, Sandra. Children's Hospital, San Francisco, California. Pediatrics King, Dennis. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Knoll, Charles. Maimonides Hospital, Brooklyn, New York. Surgery/Urology Krauss, Eugene. Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery /Orthopedics Krug, Joseph H., Jr. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine/

Ophthalmology Levens, David. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Surgery/Orthopedics Levenson, Risa. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Licht, Jonathan. Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Lidofsky, Steven D. University of Colorado Affiliated Hospitals, Denver, Colorado. Medi- cine Linder, Barbara L. Children s Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Low, Julie. McClean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts. Medicine/Psychiatry Lustbader, Ian. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Lynn, Richard. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospital, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Medicine Marchese, Michael. Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. Medicine Margolis, Steven. New England Deaconess Hospital. Boston, Massachusetts. Surgery Markowitz, John. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Marks, Frances. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics-Gynecology Martin, Steven. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Medi- cine Marzuk, Peter. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Medicine

FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1982 149

Mastropolo, Rosalie. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Mazzocchi, Annmarie. Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital, Greensboro, North Caro- lina. Family Practice McCormick, Paul. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery/Neurosurgery Mehalek, Karen. The New York Hospital, New York. New York. Obstetrics-Gynecology Mellstrom, Mark S. Mayo Graduate School of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota. Family

Practice Mercuric, Mark. Yale -New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Obstetrics- Gynecology Mirski, Anna Marie. St. Vincent s Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Mitchell, Alfred. Hartford Hospital. Hartford. Connecticut. Surgery Moffat, Gertrude. Presbyterian Hospital. New York, New York. Pediatrics Monasky, Mark. Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, Pennsylvania. Surgery Montgomery, Michael. University of Texas Southwestern Medical School Affiliated Hospi- tals, Dallas, Texas. Medicine Moscona, Anne. Mount Sinai Hospital. New York, New York. Pediatrics Muller, Adrienne. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Norton, Janet E. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Surgery Nussbaum, Monte. Overlook Hospital. Summit. New Jersey. Family Practice Oesterling, Joseph. Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore. Maryland. Surgery/Urology Olson, Stephen. Hennepin County General Hospital, Minneapolis. Minnesota. Flexible/

Surgery Park, William. University of California Hospital. Los Angeles. California. Surgery Paul, Edward. The New York Hospital. New York. New York. Psychiatry Pennoyer, Marguerite. Presbyterian Hospital. New York, New York. Medicine Perez, Wilfredo. Mount Sinai Hospital, Miami, Florida. Surgery /Orthopedics Phillips, Mark. New York University- Bellevue Hospital, New York. New York. Medicine Plotycia, Steven. Mercy Hospital. San Diego, California. Flexible/Ophthalmology Porder, Joseph. Mount Sinai Hospital. New York. New York. Medicine Price, Helen. Children 's Hospital. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Quarmby, Robert. Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital. Cooperstown, New York. Anesthesiol- ogy Rayport, Stephen. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Medicine/Psychiatry Rini, Frank. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Medicine/Ophthalmology Robbins, Peter. New York Hospital, Westchester Division, White Plains, New York. Psy- chiatry Robbins, Philip. Mount Sinai Hospital. New York. New York. Surgery/Orthopedics Rodriguez, Jaime. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Rodriguez, Rolando. The New York Hospital. New York. New York. Medicine/Neurol- ogy Rosenblatt, Marc. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Medicine/Ophthalmology Rosenzweig, Seth. Case Western Reserve University Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. Medicine Roth, Philip. Children's Hospital. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Rottman, Jeffrey. Massachusetts General Hospital. Boston. Massachusetts. Medicine Rubenfeld, Marian R. Hackensack Hospital. Hackensack, New Jersey. Medicine/

Ophthalmology Ruzal-Shapiro, Carrie. Presbyterian Hospital. New York. New York. Pediatrics Salomone, R. Jerry. Medical College of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. Emer- gency Medicine Schlaff , Anthony. Boston City Hospital. Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Schneider, Peter. Pacific Medical Center Presbyterian Hospital, San Francisco, Califor- nia. Medicine/Anesthesiology

150 FIRST-YEAR APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1982 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983

Schulder, Michael. Montefiore Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Surgery/Neurosur-

gery Sealfon, Stuart. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine/

Neurology Sehgal, Evan. George Washington University Hospital, Washington, D.C. Medicine Semrad, Carol. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Shaffer, David. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Surgery Shaffer, Nathan. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Sharp, Barbara. Childrens Hospital, San Francisco, California. Medicine Sheinbaum, Roy. St. Luke's -Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Sklar, Jeffrey. University of California (Irvine) Affiliated Hospitals, Irvine, California. Medi- cine/Ophthalmology Skowron, Gail. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Smith, Andre. Harlem Hospital Center, New York, New York. Medicine Smith, Mary. Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Surgery Stevenson, Ellen. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Medicine/Psychiatry Strongin, Jonathan. Cambridge Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Medicine Sultan, Mark. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Susser, Ezra. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center, Bronx, New York. Psychiatry Usatine, Richard. University of California Hospitals, Los Angeles, California. Family

Practice Vita, Joseph. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Wasserman, Hal. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Wellisz, Tadeusz. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Surgery Whelan, Richard. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Wolff, David. University of California (Los Angeles) Neuropsychiatric Institute, Los Angeles,

California. Psychiatry Wolfson, Steven. Danbury Hospital, Danbury, Connecticut. Medicine Yannopoulos, Aris. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Sur- gery/Orthopedics Yorke, Eric. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics

Student Roster: Class of 1983

Aldea, Peter A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975; M.A., Columbia, 1977

Alonso, Jose, Jr. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Anderson, Rolf Leon Suffern, N.Y. B.S., Harvard 1979

Arliss, Jeffrey James Locust, N.J. B.S., Vermont, 1978

Bar, Michael Henry New York, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1979

Baran, Syma Deborah New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Basner, Robert C. New York, N.Y. B.A., City College (New York). 1974

Bauer, R. David Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Beck, Marc Lloyd New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Ben-Zvi, Jeffrey S. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1979

Black, Alexander Charlton Wellesley, Ma. B.S., Harvard, 1979

Bobella, Stephen Kurt Forked River, N.J. B.A., Drew, 1979

Bonner, Matthew Kip New York, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Boos, Stephen Charles Huntington Sta., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1979 Boyle, Allyson Bass Berkeley, Ca. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1975 Boyle, Thomas Hempstead, N.Y. B.S., State University of New York (Stony Brook),

1977 Breidbart, Scott Eric Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983 151

Brill, David Alan New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Brungraber, Margaret R. Lewisburg, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Bush, James William Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1979

Cahill, Peter duPont Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979

Camacho, Victor Emanuel Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979

Camerino, Vicki Jean Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1978

Camuto, Patricia Mary New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1976

Carpenter, Richard Owen Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.S., Duke, 1979

Caselli, Maria Milagros Bergcnfield, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Caselli, Richard John Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Chalfin, Laura B. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1970

Chen, William Kuang-Yu San Ramon, Ca. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Davidson, Peter Killip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1977

Davis, Maris R. Oswego, N. Y. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1979

Davitz, Michael Andrew Samos, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1978

Dillon, John Joseph Yorktown Hts., N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1978; M.S., 1979 Donnenberg, Michael Seth Levittown, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1979 Duralde, Xavier A. East Pointe, Ga. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Dushay, Kevin Maier Fayetteville, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979 Eaton, Bradford Hunter Pelham, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Erly, William Kenneth Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Haverford, 1978 Feind, Carl Robert Alpine, N.J. B.S., Antioch, 1979 Felix, Alan David New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1979 Fiorito, Joseph John New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Fisher, Margaret Elizabeth Haddonfield, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Fletcher, Christopher W. Wellesley, Ma. B.A., Wesleyan, 1978 Florakis, George James Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Freilich, David Ira Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979 Friedman, David Paul Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Gaines, Alan David Randolph, Ma. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1979 Garbowit, David Labe New York, N.Y. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1979 Genecin, Paul Baltimore, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1977 Glatt, Aaron Eli Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1979 Gliedman, Paul R. Wallkill, N.Y. B.S., Manhattan, 1979 Goldberg, Neal Benjamin Hartsdale, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1979 Goldman, Myla P. Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1979 Goldschmidt, Howard Zvi Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Goldstein, Michael D. Smithtown, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979 Gomez-Carrion, Yvonne Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Princeton. 1979 Gonzalez, Christopher Lewis Claremont, Ca. B.A., Pitzer, 1979 Gonzalez, Victoria Mary New York, N.Y. B.A., California State (San Francisco), 1979 Green, Nancy Sue Newton, Ma. B.S., Tufts, 1979 Gutowski, Teddy Forest Hills, N.Y. B.A., Queens, (New York), 1979 Hall, Walter Allan Falls Church, Va. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Hanau, Lawrence Huto Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Hawke, Mary Wetherill Southampton, N.Y. B.A., Chicago, 1976 Hirschfield, Steven 1. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1972 Ingram, David Lloyd Somerset, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Joffe, Mark D. Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1978 Jones, Leon D. Rome, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Kalb, Thomas Heller Palm Beach, Fl. B. A., Princeton, 1979 Kamer, Russell Scott New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1979 Kastelman, James Steven Cranford, N.J. B.S.. Princeton, 1979 Keller, Wendy A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard 1975; M.A., Princeton, 1978 Klapper, Robert C. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

152 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983

Koehler, Susan Ellen Clarence, N.Y. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1979

Konecky, Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979

Kriger, Alberto Isaac Rio Piedras, P.R. B.A., Brandeis, 1979

Landry, Donald William Jersey City, N.J. B.S., Lafayette, 1975; Ph.D., Harvard, 1979

Landzberg, Joel Serge Whitestone, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Lederman, Seth Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Letsou, George Vasilios Lowell, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Linfield, Louis S. II San Francisco, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Loomis, Karen Jay New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1977

Lopez, Rafael Roberto New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Luppescu, Neal Edwin Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Lustick, Martin Ross Watertown, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978

Lytton, William Winzer Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1978

Macfarlane, Michael Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Long Island (C W. Post), 1975

McCord, Mary Marshall New York, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1973

Maloney, William Joseph Glens Falls, N.Y. B.A., Stanford, 1979

Mandel, Michael New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Manley, John C. North Port, N.Y. B.S., California Institute of Technology 1979

Matathias, Daniel J. Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Melfi, Robert Joseph Wood-Ridge, N.J. B.S., Creighton, 1979

Munro, Virginia Schaefer New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1979

Neuberg, Gerald Walter Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Okun, Alexander Lawrence New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Ostrow, Steven Mark Baldwin, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979

Paek, In Bok Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Perkins, Archibald Simon Rutherford, N.J. B.A., Williams, 1979

Perlmutter, Jeffrey Alan Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Peterson, Mark William Fort Collins, Co. B.S., Colorado State, 1979

Pierson, Richard Norris III Englewood, N.J. B. A., Princeton, 1978

Pollak, Emil Martin, Jr. Old Tappan, N.J, B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Pollak, Jeffrey Scott New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Quartararo, Christopher Huntington, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1978

Quinn, Thomas Joseph Wantagh, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979

Rampil, Ira Jay New York, N.Y. B.E.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1975

Randolph, Paula Ann New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Retikas, Anthony Demetrios Akron, Oh. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1979

Rice, Louis Bernard Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Rich, Thomas Jonathan Flourtown, Pa. B.S., Bucknell, 1979

Ring, Wendy Susan Coral Gables, Fl. B.S., Yale, 1979

Roberts, William Gary Purchase, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1979

Rochester, Carolyn Lee Charlottesville, Va. B.A., Smith, 1979

Rosenthal, Jonathan Harry New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1973

Rovit, Adam John Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Michigan, 1979

Sacks, Andrew Jay Brookfield, Ct. B.A., New College (Florida), 1975

Sacks, Evan Hilary Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1979

Saver, Barry Gordon New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1976

Schlesinger, Gail Michele Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Schoifet, Scott David Somerset, N.J. B.A., Cornell 1979

Shapiro, Matthew Scott Hewlett, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Simpson, Joseph Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Brooklyn, 1979

Smires, Harvey Edward Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Smith, Ann Elizabeth Northport, N.Y. B.A., Washington, 1979

Smith, Judith Wilson Greenwich, Ct. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Starin, Lawrence Robert Spring Valley, N.Y. B.Sc, Brown, 1979

Sullivan, John K. Paramus, N.J. B.A., Holy Cross (Massachusetts), J.D., Fordham, 1972

Tannenbaum, Gary Alan Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1983 CLASS OF 1984 153

Thoron, Louisa New York, N.Y. B.A., Colorado, 1968; M.A., Johns Hopkins, 1971

Vagelos, Randall Herodotus Watchung, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Van de Wiele, Barbara M. Alpine, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1977

Wang, Paul Johnson Indianapolis, In. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Wang, Timothy Cragin St. Louis, Mo. B.A., Williams, 1979

Wasserman, Marcia Sue New York, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1973

Weinberger, Michael Laurence Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Clark, 1979

Weinstein, Lee Scott Woodmere, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1979

Weissman, Jane Lisa New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1977

Whitley, Barbara Ellen New York, N.Y. B.A., Syracuse, 1971

Widom, Barbara Santa Cruz, Ca. B.A., Cornell, 1979

Wilkens, James Burton Toledo, Oh. B.S., Ohio State, 1979

Wilner, Philip Jonathan Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Wimpfheimer, Miriam Jane New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1975

Winter, Eric Herbert New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard 1979

Wissler, Richard Norris Canandaigua, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1974; M.S., Yale, 1976

Yolowitz, Greg Alan Spring Valley, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1979

Yu, Leonard Tobey New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1977

Zigelman, Charles Z. Woodmere, N.Y. B.A., Queens (New York), 1979

Student Roster: Class of 1984

Adkins, Elijah Stanton III Salisbury, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Alland, David New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Arato, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1980

Ashmead, Duffield Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Baez, Ana Luisa New York, N.Y. B.S, City College, 1980

Bannister, Kyra Heather Georgetown, Ct. B.A., Vermont, 1980

Barasch, Jonathan Matthew New York, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

Belisle, James Thompson Babylon, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979

Bell, Robin Ellen New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1975

Berkower, Alan Stewart Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Middlebury, 1974; M.S. Yeshiva, 1978; Ph.D.,

1980 Booker, Gaile Michele Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Boschi, Alessandro Sebastian Port Chester, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Brem, Rachel Frydman New York, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1979 Brieff , David Ben Melville, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980 Brittis, Mary Ellen Yonkers, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1980 Brown, Michael Carlvan Yorktown Heights, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Cardenosa, Gilda New York, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1979 Chak, Amitabh New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1978; M.S, 1979 Chan, Stephen Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Chietero, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1980 Christopher, Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Clain, Michael Russell Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980 Coburn, Kenneth Doyle New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980 Cohen, Sally Eisenberg Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Goucher, 1964 Constantine, Sandra Mequon, Wi. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Desser, Terry S. Whitestone, N.Y. B. A., Princeton, 1979

Di Franco, Matthew Joaquin New York, N.Y. B.A., California (Santa Cruz), 1979 Draga, Aspasia E. Malba, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Egnor, Michael Robert Catskill, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Fallon, Regis Francis Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Fayter, Judith Ann Staten Island, N.Y. B.S., Pace, 1978 Fithian, Donald Coburn Bridgeton, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

154 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984

Florin, Cynthia Ann New York, N.Y. B.S., Grinnell, 1976

Ford, Jean Guillaume Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978

Freeman, Phillip Sanford North Freeport, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1975

Gallay, Brian James Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Gewirtz, George Robert Bronx, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1979

Goldberg, Mark Paul Chicago, II. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Goldstein, Jeffrey Alan Southfield, Mi. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Gorton, Christopher P. Nashua, N.H. B. A., Dartmouth, 1980

Goyal, Alok Kendal Park, N.J. B.S., Columbia, 1980

Graff, Wayne Brian Merrick, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980

Graham, Jeffrey Scott Summit, N.J. B.A., Williams, 1980

Greenbaum, Linda Ellen New York, N.Y. B. A., Harvard, 1980

Guthrie, Ellen Hobson Hilton Head Island, S.C. B.A., Colorado, 1980

Haspel, Kenneth Lewis West Hartford, Ct. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

Hibbard, Claire Alexandra Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Hsu, Ho-Wen Timonium, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Hyll, Marsha Karin Green Brook, N.J. B. A., Princeton, 1975

Ivey, Louis Albert Silver Springs, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Jackson, Byron A. Shreveport, La. B.A., New York University, 1980

Jeevanandam, Valluvan M. New Milford, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Johnson, Gregory Kent Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Johnston, Peter Shivers Stockton, N.J. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.A., Columbia, 1972

Jules, Kethy Marie Elmhurst, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1980

Kao, Peter Nicholas Pound Ridge, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Karlin, Scott Marc Greenlawn, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980

Kaye, Katherine Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Princeton. 1980

Kazim, Michael Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Kellogg, Collins Frederick Croghan, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1977; M.A., Columbia, 1979

Kim, Anthony Hyoung Queens, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980

Kim, Kami Albany, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Kimball, Robert Owen Geneva, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979

Krongrad, Arnon Harrington Park, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Ku, Andrew Bergenfield, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Lang, Thomas Philip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

LaScala, Carlo Paul Port Jefferson, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980

Lattimer, Douglas Gary New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975; M.A., Columbia, 1978

Leibenhaut, Mark Harris Oceanside, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Levin, Neil Chevy Chase, Md. B.S.E.S., Tufts, 1980

Lewis, Allison Elizabeth Menlo Park, Ca. B.S.E., Princeton, 1980

Liberman, Laura Newton, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Lombardo, Gregory Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.A., Columbia,

1980 Love, Karen Anita Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Cornell. 1980 Luyando, Yvonne New York, N.Y. B.A., Fordham, 1980 Ma, Averil I. Thornwood, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 McDonagh, Kevin T. New York, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1980 Magnes, Jeffrey New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1975 Mahon, John Henry Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Notre Dame. 1980 Markowitz, Arlene Helen Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Wellesley, 1980 Mathews, Donald Marshall Schenectady, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Miller, Steven Zane Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Milrod, Barbara Louise New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979 Modic, Frank Edward Scotia, N.Y. B.S., Cornell. 1980 Moss, William John Demarest, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980 Mulvey, Kevin Patrick Los Altos, Ca. B.S., San Francisco, 1980

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 155

Neustein, Steven Mark West Orange, N.J. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

1980 Nimkin, Katherine New York, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978 Nordli, Douglas Ray Melville, N.Y. B.S., Haverford. 1980 Odrich, Marc Geoffrey Bronx, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1980 O'Keeffe, Richard Michael, Jr. Weston, Ma. B.A., Dartmouth. 1980 Olsen, Janet Louise Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Vassar. 1978; M.S.. Columbia. 1979 Olson, Eric Jon Chadds Ford, Pa. B. A.. Princeton, 1980 Oquendo, Maria Antonia Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., B.A., Tufts. 1980 Palma, James New York, NY. City College. 1980 Palmer, Barbara Ann New York, N.Y. B.A.. Barnard. 1979 Pawlowski, Ann Margaret Lynnfield, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Pearl, Michael Lawrence Southfield, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1979 Peng, Benjamin C. H. Kew Gardens, N.Y. B. A.. Rochester. 1980 Pero, Robert Thomas Hyde Park, Ma. B.A.. Harvard, 1980 Proano, Maritza Queens, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1980 Quinn, Brian James Massapeaua, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979 Rabbani, LeRoy E. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Rautenberg, Mark Alan Brockton, Ma. B.A., Cornell, 1980 Raymond, Elizabeth Gray Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Swarthmore. 1980 Reilly, Philip Joseph New York, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1976 Reimold, Andreas Michael N. Canton, Oh. B. A., Harvard, 1980 Rennert, Douglas Andrew New York, N.Y. B.S., Haverford. 1980 Roberts, James Wayne Jamaica, N.Y. B.A.. Harvard, 1980 Rodrigues, Beatriz A. Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Romano, Thomas Jerome Camillus, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1980 Rottkamp, John Robert Commack, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook). 1980 Ruiz, Frank Westbury, N.Y. B.S, Yale, 1980 Saladini, Vincent Rocco, Jr. Clifton, N.J. B.A., Columbia. 1980 Santos, Annabelle Villatuya Mollis, N.Y. B. A.. Barnard. 1980 Schmiedeberg, Phyllis N. Babylon, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1980 Schoen, Robert Edward Beverly Hills, Ca. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Schoenberg, Norman Island Park, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra. 1980 Schriger, David Lawrence Englewood, N.J. B.A., Amherst, 1980 Schwartzbach, Gary C. Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Scuderi, Donna Marie Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980 Seymour, Neal Edward Oakdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Shaw, Andrey Shin-Yee Seattle, Wash. B.A.. Columbia, 1979 Sheffield, Mary Katherine Longmeadow, Ma. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1980 Singer, Meriamne Bruche New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980 Somlo, Stefan Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Sorensen, Mark Francis Rockville Centre, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1980 Speirs, Robert Thomas Port Washington, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia. 1980 Spriegel, John R. Evanston, 11. B.S.E.. Princeton, 1978 Stegall, Mark Dale Crosbyton, Tx. B.A., Harvard. 1979 Stork, Philip Jacques Stewart Englewood, N.J. B.S.. Harvard, 1977 Tamargo, Rafael Jesus Santurce, P.R. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Teichman, Faye Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1980 Tilley, Robert John Tacoma, Wa. B.S., Washington, 1980 Tong, Dominic J. F. Honolulu, Hi. B.S., Hawaii (Manoa), 1978 Torres, Ramon Antonio New York, N.Y. B.A.. New York University, 1980 Turey, Maureen New York, N.Y. B.A.. Barnard, 1976 Weber, Pamela Ann Buffalo, N.Y. B.S., McGili 1980 Westermann, Robert Bayless West Hartford, Ct. B. A., Harvard. 1980 Westrich, David Joshua New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

156 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 CLASS OF 1985

Whitehurst, James Howell Atlanta, Ga. B.S., Vanderbilt, 1980

Whitley, Markus Andrew Bowie, Md. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1980 Whitlock, Mary Elizabeth Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1980 Wiedermann, Joseph Gad Englewood, N.J. B. A., Harvard, 1979 Winston, Julia Lynn Oakland, N.J. B.S., Bucknell, 1979 Wirth, Robert Lockridge Troy, Mi. B.S.E., Michigan, 1974; M.S.E., 1975 Witham, Rebecca Sue Needham, Ma. B.S., Yale, 1979 Wong, Shing-Chiu East Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Wong, Ting Hung Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1980 Yancopoulos, George Damis Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Yen, Catherine Eleanor Honolulu, Hi. B.S., Hawaii (Manoa), 1979 Yuen, Jeffrey C. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977; M.S., California Institute of Technol- ogy, 1978

Student Roster: Class of 1985

Abis, David Woodbourne, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1981

Aboody, Linda Rachel Westbury, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981

Alexander, Joseph James Stockton, Ca. B.S., California (Davis). 1981

Aviv, Jonathan Enoch Beverly Hills, Ca. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Avner, Jeffrey Ronald Bellerose Manor, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1981

Bachner, Evan Jay Syossett, N.Y. B. A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Bank, David Eugene Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Baruch, Alice M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1974; M.S., New York Medical,

1979; Ph.D., 1981 Barzel, Eyal Bronx, N.Y. B.Sc, Brown, 1981 Bass, Anne Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Batik, Odette G. New York, N.Y. B.S., Antioch, 1977; M.P.H., Columbia, 1981 Baum, Seth Joshua New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Benardo, Larry Steven Anaheim Hills, Ca. B.S., California (Irvine), 1977; Ph.D., Stanford,

1981 Bendixen, Birgitte Holt Irvington, N.Y. B.A., California (San Diego), 1973; M.A., 1975;

C.Phil, 1977; Ph.D., 1980 Bindelglass, David Fred White Plains, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Bogosh, Samuel Winston Brookline, Ma. B.Sc, Harvard, 1981 Bob, Peter Michael Grand Blanc, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1981 Brancati, Frederick Louis Dix Hills, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Branden, Peter John Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Johns Hopkins, 1981 Brennan, John Paul New York, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1975 Brown, Robin Renee Suitland, Md. B.S., Maryland, 1981 Brown, William C. Sparkill, N.Y. B.S, SUNY (Binghamton), 1981 Brusco, Louis Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Canning, Robert Babylon, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Chan, Bernadette New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Chance, John Tighe Rutherford, N.J. B.A., Williams. 1981 Chang, Sophia Whasun McLean, Va. B.A., Amherst, 1981 Charney, Mark Alan Fullerton, Ca. B.S., Stanford, 1981 Coburn, Cynthia Ann New York, N.Y. B.Sc, Brown, 1980 Cohen, Seth Aloe Cambridge, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Coman, Eugene Anthony Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1981 Compaine, Andrew Guy Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Conde, Miguel Angel New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Crim, Julia Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Oberlin, 1978 Cushman, James Gordon Camp Hill, Pa. B.A., Washington, 1981 Dalak, Gregory Wakeem Staten Island, N.Y. B.S., Yale. 1981

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985 157

Davol, Joan Evers Greenwich, Ct. B.A., Williams, 1976

Deutsch, Nicholas Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Diamond, Lisa Carol New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Dickson, David Gordon Lewiston, N.Y. B.S., Rochester, 1981

Dirbas, Frederick Mark Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Stanford, 1981

Downey, Robert John Closter, N.J. B.Sc, Yale, 1981

Duberman, Eric David Armonk, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Edeen, John Kearny, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Ehrlich, Martin Harvey New York, N.Y. B.A., Rochester, 1973

Emery, John Matthew Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Fallon, Brian Anthony Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1976; M.Ed., 1978; M.P.H., Columbia, 1980

Flock, Timothy Joseph Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Freeman, Neil Joshua Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1979

Frend, Jeremy M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Frishman, Gary Nathan Armonk, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

Gabrieli, Christopher F.O. Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Geller, Arthur Jay East Brunswick, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Gerst, Steven Richard New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Geurts, Barbara Linda So. Plainfield, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1981

Gilson, Michael Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard. 1981

Glassman, Steven David Teaneck, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Gopal, Aasha S. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia 1979; M.Sc, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981

Gordon, Marc Lawrence Rochester, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Buffalo), 1975; M.A., 1976

Greenberg, Steven Mark Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Gribetz, Richard I. New York, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1975; B.H.L., M.A., Jewish Theologi- cal Seminary, 1979

Grinberg, Manuel Eduardo Roslyn, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981

Harding, James Sutherland Toledo, Oh. B.A., Harvard. 1981

Hardy, Russell Irving Auburn, Ma. B.A., Williams, 1978

Hershey, Mark David Brewster, N.Y. B. A., Rochester, 1981

Hill, Terri Lynn Columbia, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Hirschhorn, Lisa Ruth New York, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Hodges, Marian Osborne Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth. 1979

Hoffman, Jeffrey Greg Bayside, N.Y. B.A.. Pennsylvania. 1981

Hong, Roy W. Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Brown. 1981

Housey, Gerard Mitchell Harper Woods, Mi. B.S.. Michigan, 1981

Hripcsak, George Michael Hicksville, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1981

Jacobs, Laurie Gail Pleasantville, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1981

Jennis, Andrew Abraham South Orange, N.J. B.A., Yale, 1981

Jones, James Irvin New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981

Jones, Valerie Teresa Montclair, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1981

Julien, Juana Maria Hileah, Fl. B.S., Miami, 1981

Kaplan, Andrew Howard Melville, N.Y. B.S., Harvard 1981

Kaplan, Bruce Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1981

Kim, Albert Nelson Spring Valley, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Klumpar, David Ivan Lexington, Ma. B.Sc, Brown, 1981

Koeleveld, Robin Frederick Newport News, Va. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Kramer, Ethan Douglas Tuscaloosa, Al. B.A., Vassar, 1981

Laske, Douglas Walter New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard 1981

Levine, Nancy E. Setauket, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980

Lin, Christopher Chi-Ching Forest Hills, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981

Lloyd, Mary Ann Ellen Danville, Ca. B.S.. San Francisco, 1981

Lodge, Henry Sears Beverly, Ma. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

158 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985

Maddon, Paul Jay Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia. 1981

Madsen, Nancy Sue Wethersfield, Ct. B.S., Bates, 1981

Markowitz, David Daniel Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Swarthmore. 1981

Matthew, Thomas Lewis New York, N.Y. B. A.. Harvard. 1981

McKenzie, Keith B. Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Columbia. 1980

McNulty, John Michael West Nyack, N.Y. B.S.. Columbia. 1981

Mendez, Leonardo Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., Yale, 1981

Meng, Tze-Chiang New Rochelle, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Morrone, Lee Ellen Lackawaxen, Pa. B.A., Barnard. 1981

Moscoso, Juan Francisco Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., Michigan, 1981

Navedo, Andres Tadeo Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Puerto Rico, 1981

Nunez, Richard Flushing, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1981

Oddone, Eugene Z. Colorado Springs, Co. B.S., Denver, 1981

Ores, David Joseph Leonia, N.J. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan. 1981

Pacheco, Elba Milagros Ponce, P.R. B.A.. Wellesley, 1981

Pak, Wonkyu Sunnyvale, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Pearsen, Kenneth Daniel Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Pollock, Roger Gerard Farmingdale, N.Y. B.A.. Yale. 1981

Radoslovich, Glauco Andrew Cliffside Park, N.J. B.S.. St. Peter's. 1981

Reiser, Janet Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia. 1981

Rosen, Beth Alyse Massapequa, N.Y. B.A.. Pennsylvania, 1981

Rosenblum, Nancy Jamaica Estates, N.Y.- B.Sc. Cornell. 1981

Ross, Lisa Anne Los Angeles, Ca. B. A., Harvard, 1981

Russo, Joseph Richard Huntington, N.Y. B.S.. St. John s (New York). 1981

Sampson, John George Bronx, N.Y. B.S.. SUNY (Stony Brook). 1981

Satra, Karin Helene W. Paterson, N.J. B. A.. Rutgers. 1981

Schweitzer, Jana Tenafly, N.J. B.A.. California (Berkeley), 1981

Seefeld, William C.R. Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1973; O.D., New England College of

Optometry, 1977 Segal, Bruce Arthur Weston, Ma. B.A., Clark 1981 Shapiro, Janet Marjorie New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale. 1981 Sheiman, Robert Glenn Yonkers. N.Y. B.S.. Columbia. 1980 Shikora, Scott Alan Bellerose, N.Y. B.S.. Muhlenberg. 1981 Shlasko, Edward New York, N.Y. B.A.. Oberlin. 1979 Siderides, Elizabeth Stamford, Ct. B.A., Harvard. 1981 Silbey, Mark Bennett Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan. 1979; M.A.. Rice. 1981 Simotas, Alexander C. Alpine, N.J. B.A.. Columbia, 1981 Slater, Jonathan Allen New City. N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Spector, Paul Joseph New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1978 Stein, Michael David Cliffside Park, N.J. B.A.. Harvard 1981 Stopek, Alison Tami Plainview, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981 Straceski, Anthony Joseph E. Hartford, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Strachan, Alexander New York, N.Y. B.A., Fordham. 1980 Summit, Pamela Honey Merrick, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981 Taterka, James Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981 Thadani, Vjay Michael Chevy Chase, Md. B.A.. Princeton. 1976; M.Phil, Yale, 1978;

Ph.D., Yale, 1981 Theise, Neil David W. Hartford, Ct. B.A., B.A.S., Pennsylvania, 1981 Tissot, Marc Francis Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Queens (New York). 1981 Touran, Touraj Tehran, Iran B.A., Princeton, 1981 Trehu, Stephen Marc Wilmington, De. B. A.. Princeton. 1981 Valdes, Alfonso Jose Miami, Fl. B.S.. Miami 1981 Villegas, Robert Arturo New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.S., St. John s (New York), 1981

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985 CLASS OF 1986 159

Walker, Benjamin Harrison New York, N.Y. B.A., Bowdoin, 1981

Warren, Wayne Scott Forest Hills, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1981 Weinthal, Joel Adam Pearl River, N.Y. B.S., Stanford, 1981 Weiss, Robert Marc N. Bellmore, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1981 Willenbucher, Robert Francis New York, N.Y. B.S., Rochester, 1981 Wiltz, Othon San Juan, P.R. B.S., Johns Hopkins, 1981 Wohl, Jodie Carol New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977 Wolf, David Gary Livingston, N.J. B.A., Yale, 1981 Yarmush, Joel Mann Brooklyn, N.Y. B.E., Cooper Union, 1977; M.A.. Princeton, 1979:

Ph.D.. Princeton. 1981 Zeller, Lawrence Ira New York, N.Y. M.S W.. SUNY (Stony Brook), 1974 Zuckerman, Alan Miles N. Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Harvard. 1981

Student Roster: Class of 1986

Albanese, Salvatore San Juan, P.R. B.S., Brandeis, 1982

Allen, Kevin P. New York, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia. 1982

Altmann, Dory B. West Orange, N.J. B.A.. Harvard. 1982

Angel, Jose Manuel Sunnyside, N.Y. B.S.. City College, 1982

Ashbaugh, Cameron D. Boise, Id. B. A.. Dartmouth, 1982

Attia, Evelyn Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A.. Princeton. 1982

Auerbach, Steven B. New York, N.Y. B.S., Union (Schnectady). 1982

Aupperle, Peter M. Melville, N.Y. B.A.. Princeton. 1982

Balmaceda, Casilda M. Ponce, P.R. B.S., Tufts, 1981

Bass, Lawrence S. Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1982

Bedichek, Ellen G. Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A.. Middlebury. 1977

Benton, Anne F. La Jolla, Ca. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Boublik, Martin Caldwell, N.J. B.A.. Princeton, 1982

Boulier, James P. Glen Burnie, Md. B.E.S.. Johns Hopkins. 1982

Brager, Amy R. Mt. Vernon, N.Y. B.S.. Tufts. 1977

Bramble, Daniel M. Trinidad, W.L B.A.. Boston. 1982

Brevig, Kjetil Orangeburg, N.Y. B.S.. Tufts. 1982

Brody, Mark R. Somerville, Ma. B.A.. Harvard, 1979

Bromson, Mark S. Tarrytown, N.Y. B.A., Harvard. 1982

Brown, Carol Leslie Los Angeles, Ca. B.A.. Harvard. 1982

Brown, Steven L. Decatur, Ga. B.S.. Emory. 1981

Buetow, Peter C. West Islip, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1982

Burke, Steven K. Chestnut Hill, Ma. B.A.. Harvard. 1982

Cannon, Chris P. Ridgewood, N.J. B.A.. Yale. 1982

Carroll, Deborah J. New York, N.Y. B.A.. Harvard 1982

Carter, Fred M. Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1982

Castillo, Jairo E. Astoria, N.Y. B.A., Queens (New York). 1982

Castro, Michael P. Baltimore, Md. B.A., Brandeis, 1979

Chan, Angela Mei New York, N.Y. B. A., Barnard, 1982

Chan, Edward D. Colorado Springs, Co. B.A.. B.S.. Colorado. 1982

Chavez, Camille D. Briarwood, N.Y. B.A.. Cornell. 1977

Chen, Ming Hui Princeton, N.J. B.A., Princeton. 1982

Chester, Janis Gale New York, N.Y. B.A.. Hunter, 1981

Chow, Franklin T. Northport, N.Y. B.S., Rochester. 1982

Civantos, Francisco Coral Gables, Fl. B.A.. B.S.. Harvard. 1982

Clark, Richard D. Denver, Co. B.A., California (Berkeley). 1969; Ph.D., 1975

Coelho, Daniel D. Prospect, Ct. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Coffey, Tom K. Portland, Or. B.A., Stanford, 1982

Cole, Douglas G. Casper, Wy. B.A., Dartmouth. 1981

Cooke, Lawrence W. Palatka, Fl. B.S., Florida, 1982

160 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1986

Dal Pan, Gerald J. Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1982

Damm, Christopher Mineola, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Davila, Jose Jorge Rio Piedras, P.R. B.A, Princeton, 1982

DeAlleaume, Lauren Albany, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981

DeMayo, William M. Ridgewood, N.J. B.S., Boston, 1982

Dent, John M. McLean, Va. B. A., Harvard, 1982

Diaz, Theresa Orangeburg, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1982

Dominguez, Lourdes New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1982

Donovan, Nancy Jean New York, N.Y. B.A., Bowdoin, 1978

Duncan, Susana G. New York, N.Y. B.A., Cambridge, 1969

Edwards, Niloo M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1969

Ehlert, Ferderick Sheboygan, Wi. B.S.. Marquette, 1982

Ehrich, Elliot W. Marblehead, Ma. B.A.. Princeton, 1981

Estabrook, Scott G. Far Hills, N.J. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1982

Finkelstein, Michael Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Fisher, Keith D. Oklahoma City, Ok. B.S., Oklahoma, 1982

Fradin, Mark S. Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., Brown. 1981

Frieden, Thomas R. Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Oberlin, 1982

Friedman, Noah J. Flushing, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Binghampton), 1982

Friedmann, Craig H. New York, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1975

Garrity, Michael J. Hingham, Ma. B.A. , Massachusetts (Amherst), 1981

Gelernt, Mark D. Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1982

Gilson, Michael F. Cambridge, Ma. B.S.E., Princeton, 1978

Gomes, John L. Waltham, Ma. B.Sc, Brown, 1982

Gonzalez, Charles J. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Gordon, Paul Clark Woodbridge, Ct. B.A. , Yale, 1982

Greenblatt, Eric P. New York, N.Y. B.S., Michigan, 1982

Gruen, John P. New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976

Hardy, Stephen P. New York, N.Y. B.A., Colgate, 1979

Hartman, Sarah Washington, D.C. B.S., Tufts, 1977

Housepian, David M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Hyman, Barry Scott New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Jadonath, Ram Lakhan Queens, N.Y. B.A., Queens (New York), 1982

Jay, Cheryl Ann Torrance, Ca. B.S., California (Los Angeles). 1982

Jicha, Douglas L. Ardsiey, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Johannet, Christopher New York, N.Y. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1977

John, Joseph A. Bronx, N.Y. B.Sc, City College, 1982

Jonassen, Amy E. Locust Valley, N.Y. B.A., Rice, 1981

Jones, Sean Eric Seattle, Wa. B.A., Reed, 1980

Joseph, Antonio, Jr. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1982

Korner, Judy New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Kraus, Warren M. Valley Stream, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1982

Kuester, David J. Woodside, N.Y. B.A., Wisconsin, 1974

Kugelmass, Aaron D. Stoors, Ct. B.A.. Columbia, 1982

Lanier, Diane L. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A.. Cambridge, 1979

Leavitt, Robert P. Longmeadow, Ma. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1982

Lennon, Paul F. Saddle River, N.J. B.S, Harvard, 1982

Lerner, Barron H. University Heights, Oh. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Lewin, Julie M, Princeton, N.J. B.S.E., Princeton, 1982

Linden, Todd B. North Caldwell, N.J. B.A., B.Sc, Brown, 1982

Linskey, Mark E. Somerville, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1982

Lopez, Juan A. Plantation, Fl. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1982

Lundblad, James R. Yakima, Wa. B.S., Stanford, 1981

Lunt, John G. Saratoga, Wy. B.A., Colorado, 1980

Maday, Michael G. Mt. Prospect, II. B.A., Knox, 1981; M.A., Columbia, 1982

Malkani, Arthur L. New York, N.Y. B.S, Columbia, 1982

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1986 161

Mandel, Susan J. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard. 1982

Marco, Alan P. Oakhurst, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1982

McCormack, Bruce M. Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Brown, 1982

Miller, Thomas E. Richmond, In. Princeton, 1981

Mitrane, Donald P. North Bergen, N.J. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Mitrani, Raul Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Morales, Susan Pelham, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Muscat, Paul L. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Naidu, Rahul K. Skokie, II. B.Sc, Stanford. 1982

Nazarian, Levon N. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. B.A., Harvard. 1982

Nields, Jenifer A. Huntington, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Owen, Heidi M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Rhode Island, 1976: B.S.. 1978

Park, Edward K. Holbrook, N.Y. B.A., Harvard 1981

Parsons-Armstrong, Susan Sharon Springs, N.Y. B.A., Kirkland, 1976

Pearl, Barbara S. New York, N.Y. B.A., Emory, 1974

Perese, Deniz A. Buffalo, N.Y. B. A., Harvard. 1982

Pernis, Alessandra B. Bronxville, N.Y. B.A., Barnard. 1981

Picou, Dian A. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College. 1982

Polsen, Dianne C. New York, N.Y. B.S., Mercy. 1978

Rapuano, Christopher Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Brown, 1982

Re, Louis S. Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Rich, Harlan G. Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Roland, Aaron M. Livermore, Ca. B.A., Yale, 1979

Roth, Jeffrey S. New Haven, Ct. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Rubin, Marc S. Chestnut Hill, Ma. B.A., Williams, 1982

Rudolf, Margaret S. New York, N.Y. B.S., Brown, 1981

Sable, David B. West Orange, N.J. B.S., Pennsylvania. 1981

Saffran, Alan J. Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1981

Santoro, Ian H. Dover, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Schwann, Thomas A. South Massapequa, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia. 1982

Seidner, Elyse L. Philadelphia, Pa. B.A.. Pennsylvania. 1982

Siller, Karen A. Pleasantville, N.Y. B.A., Pace, 1972

Slawin, Kevin M. Valley Stream, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Slusser, Wendelin M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1981

Smith, David A. White Plains, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1965

Solnick, Jay V. Kansas City, Ks. B.A., California (San Diego), 1971; Ph.D., North Carolina,

1977 Stauffer, J. Turner Hamilton, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1982 Strauch, Robert J. New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A.. Columbia, 1982 Tamman, Richard Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1982 Teltscher, Janet C. Roslyn, N.Y. B.A.. Harvard. 1981 Thomas, William G. Clinton, Md. B.S., George Washington, 1982 Tronolone, William Raritan, N.J. B.A., Lafayette, 1982 Turtel, Lawrence S. Melville, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982 Warren, Stephen P. Newark, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1982 Watnick, Terry South Orange, N.J. B.S., Brown, 1981 Weil, Henry Cooperstown, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1980 Weinstein, Toba A. Garden City, N.Y. B.A.. SUNY (Binghamton). 1982 Weinstock, Ira A. Boulder, Co. B.A., Williams, 1980 White, Richard L., Jr. Ithaca, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1982 Wint, Jeffrey C. New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982 Yonkers, Kimberly A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1979

Index

Absence, leave of, 43

Academic disciple: see Regulations

Academic year: calendar, 5-7; divisions, 44

Administration: Health Sciences, 8; Joint Administrative Board, 10; staff, 11

Admission(s): Committee on, 10, 25-26; application procedure, 25; requirements, 25-26; application fee, 25, 28; to advanced standing, 26; of foreign stu- dents, 26

Administrative staff, 8

Advanced standing, 26

Advisory Committee to the Dean, Chair- men's, 10

Affiliated hospitals, 21-24

Alpha Omega Alpha, 40

Alumni Association, 41

Anatomy: courses, 45

Anatomy and Cell Biology, Officers of instruction, 57-58

Anesthesiology: course, 46; officers of instruction, 58-61

Application: for degrees, 5-7, 29; for admission, 25-26; fees, 25, 28; for finan- cial aid, 31-40

Attendance, 27

Auditing courses, 27

Augustus C. Long Library, 19

Awards, 38-40, 51-52

Bard Hall, 30-31

Bard Haven Towers, 31

Bassett, Mary Imogene, Hospital, 22

Biochemistry: course, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 61-63

Biology: abnormal human, course, 44

Biophysics and biophysical chemistry, spe- cial program in, 52

Biostatistics, officers of instruction, 122-23

Calendar, Academic, 5-7

Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, 20

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and

Research, 50 Centers for Community Health, 20 Certificate in psychoanalysis, 50 Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the

Dean, 10 Clinical genetics, special program in, 52

College of Physicians and Surgeons: his- tory, purpose, and location, 17, 18-19; program of instruction, 43-52

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, 17-21

Columbia University: relation to P&S, his- tory, 17, 18-19; library, 19; campus facilities, 40

Comprehensive Cancer Center/ Institute of Cancer Research, 19

Conduct, 27

Course numbers, key to, 44

Courses: electives, 43; summary of curricu- lum, 44; basic science and introductory clinical, 44-46; major clinical year, 46- 48; Fourth year, 48; for practicing physi- cians and specialists, 55

Curriculum: Committee on, 10; summary of, 44

Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, 8 Degrees: application dates, 5-7, 29; dates of award, 6-7; M.D., 17, 49; Ph.D., 49, 50, 51; M.S., 50; Med.Sc.D., 55; see also Certificate in psychoanalysis; National Board examinations Dental and Oral Surgery, School of, 18, 20 Departments of Instruction, 57-144 Dermatology: course, 46; officers of instruc- tion, 63-65 Discipline, academic: see Regulations Doctor of Medical Science degree, 55 Doctor of Medicine degree, 17; in combina- tion with M.P.H. degree, 49; in combina- tion with Ph.D. degree, 49 Doctor of Philosophy degree; in combina- tion with M.D. degree, 49; in nutrition, 50; in biophysics and biophysical chemis- try, 51 Dormitories, 30-31

Emeriti officers, 11-14

Employment for spouses of students, 31

Endowed lectureships, 51

Endowed scholarship funds, 32-36

Environmental Sciences, officers of instruc- tion, 123

Epidemiology, officers of instruction, 123- 124

Equipment: estimated cost of, 30; require- ment, 30

INDEX 163

Executive Committee of the Faculty Coun- cil, 8 Expenses, estimated, 30; see also Fees

Faculty Council: Executive Committee of the, 8; of the Faculty of Medicine, 9

Faculty of Medicine, 8-14

Fees: payment of, 5-7; application, 25, 28; health service and hospital insurance, 28; late, 28; withdrawal and adjustment of, 29; see also Expenses, estimated

Financial aid, 31-40

Foreign students: admission of, 26; loans to, 36

Genetics: see Human Genetics and Devel- opment

Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center, 20

Gift funds, 36

Grades and promotions, 43-44

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences: rela- tion to P&S, 49

Gynecology: see Obstetrics and Gynecol- ogy

Harlem Hospital Center, 22

Health administration: officers of instruc- tion, 124-27

Health service, 28

Helen Hayes Hospital, 22-23

History of the College and the University, 18-19

Hospitals, teaching, 21-24

Housing, 30-31

Human Genetics and Development: course, 45; officers of instruction, 65-66

Human nutrition, 20

Institute of Cancer Research, 19 Institute of Human Nutrition, 20 International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction, 21

Joint Administrative Board, 10

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center Augustus Long Li- brary, 19

Key to course numbers, 44

Leaves of absence, 43-44 Lectureships, endowed, 51 Libraries: Health Sciences, 19; University,

19,40 Loans, 36-38

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, 22

Master of Science degree: in human nutri- tion, 50; in physcial therapy and occupa- tional therapy, 50

Medical service to students, 28

Medicine: courses, 45, 46, 47; officers of instruction, 66-77

Microbiology: course, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 77-78

Microscopes, 30

Morristown Memorial Hospital, 23

National Board examinations, 7, 44

Neurological Surgery, officers of instruc- tion, 79-80

Neurology: teaching hospital, 22; courses, 47; officers of instruction, 80-83

Nondiscriminatory policies, statement of, 17-18

Nursing, School of, 18

Nutrition: course, 45; special programs in, 50; see also Institute of Human Nutrition

Obstetrics and Gynecology: teaching hospi- tal, 22; course, 47; officers of instruction, 83-87

Occupational therapy, see Physical Thera- py; Master of Science degree

Ophthalmology: teaching hospital, 22; course, 47; officers of instruction, 88-90

Orthopedic Surgery: teaching hospital, 21; course, 47; officers of instruction, 90-93

Otolaryngology: course, 47; officers of instruction, 93-94

Overlook Hospital, 23

P&S Club, 40

Pathology: courses, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 94-100

Pediatrics: teaching hospital, 22; course, 48; officers of instruction, 100-107

Pharmacology: course, 46, officers of instruction, 108-9

Physical therapy and occupational therapy, special programs in, 50; see also Rehabil- itation Medicine

Physicians and Surgeons: see College of Physicians and Surgeons

Physiology: courses, 45, 46; officers of instruction, 109-10

Population and Family Health, officers of instruction, 127-28

Postgraduate Programs, 55

Presbyterian Hospital, 10, 21-22

President of the University, 8

Prizes, 38-40, 51-52

164 INDEX

Program of instruction for the M.D. degree, 43; summary of curriculum, 44

Programs, postgraduate, 55

Programs, special: for the Ph.D. degree, 49, 50, 51; in physical therapy and occupational therapy, 50; in psychoana- lytic medicine, 50; in nutrition, 50; in clinical genetics, 51; in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, 51

Promotions, grades and, 43-44

Psychiatric Institute, New York State, 18, 24

Psychiatry: teaching hospital, 22; courses, 46, 48; officers of instruction, 110-22

Psychoanalytic Training and Research Cen- ter for, special programs, 50

Public Health; School of, 18, 20, 43; courses, 46; officers of instruction, 122- 30

Radiology: courses, 48; officers of instruc- tion, 130-34

Readmission, 44

Registration: dates, 5-7; 26; late, 28

Regulations, University, 26-27

Rehabilitation Medicine: course, 48; officers of instruction, 134-37

Religious holidays and attendance, 27

Research: cancer, 19; in nutrition, 20, 50; in human reproduction, 21; in clinical genetics, 52

Residence halls, 30-31

Roosevelt Hospital Division, 24

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division, 24 St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, 23-

24 Scholarships, 31-36

Sergievsky, Gertrude H., Center, 20

Sociomedical Sciences, officers of instruc- tion, 128-29

Specialization: programs for, 49-51; grad- uate, 55

Statement of nondiscriminatory policies, 17-18

Students: selection of, 25-26; medical ser- vice to, 28; financial aid, 31-40; housing, 30-31; activities, 40-41

Students, roster of: First-year postgraduate appointments: Class of 1982, 147-50; Class of 1983, 150-53; Class of 1984, 153-56; Class of 1985, 156-59; Class of 1986, 159-61

Surgery: courses, 48; officers of instruction, 137-42

Teaching hospitals, 21-24

Teaching staff of the departments: see

under names of departments Transcripts, 30 Tropical medicine: officers of instruction,

129 Tuition, 28; refund of, 29

University Rights, Reservation of, 18 University Senate delegates, 10 Urology: teaching hospital, 21; course, 48; officers of instruction, 142-44

Vice President for Health Sciences, 8 Visiting professorship, 51

Washington Heights Health and Teaching

Center, 18 William Black Medical Research Center,

19,20 Withdrawal and adjustment of fees, 29

Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center Columbia University

Co

IND8TH AV

IRT NO 1 LOCAL

SUBWAY STATION

WEST 167TH STREET

Alumni Auditorium Augustus Long Library Dana W. Atchley Pavilion

The Babies Hospital Babies Hospital Research, Teaching, and Office Addition

Bard Hall Medical Student

Residence

Bard Haven Towers

William Black Medical

Research Building

Cancer Center/Institute of

Cancer Research

Central Service Building

College of Physicians and

Surgeons

Center for Community

Health Systems

13

22

23

7 16 20

2/12

School of Dental and Oral

Surgery

Georgian Nurses

Residence

Edward S. Harkness Eye

Institute

Eye Institute Research

Laboratories

Harkness Memorial Hall

Harkness Pavilion

Pauline A. Hartford

Memorial Chapel

Julius and Armand

Hammer Health Sciences

Center

Institute of Human

Nutrition

International Institute for

the Study of Human

Reproduction

6 Anna C. Maxwell Hall, School of Nursing Residence

5 The Neurological Institute of New York

6 School of Nursing 25 Parking facilities

17 Presbyterian Hospital New York Orthopedic

Hospital Sloane Hospital for

Women Squier Urological Clinic 4 New York State

Psychiatric Institute 4 Psychoanalytic Clinic 15 School of Public Health 19 Radiotherapy Center

13 Vanderbilt Clinic

14 Vanderbilt Clinic Addition

The Faculty of Medicine COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS

1983-1984

Inquiries

POST OFHCE ADDRESS:

College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University 630 West 168th Street New York, N.Y. 10032

TELEPHONE INQUIRIES:

Office of Admissions: (Area code 212) 694-3596 Office of Financial Aid: (Area code 212) 694-4100

OTHER BULLETINS OF THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE:

Human Nutrition

Nursing (including the Graduate Programs: Adult/Child Acute Care, Adult Nurse Practitioner, Community Nursing, Gerontology, Maternity Nursing-Nurse-Midwifery, Nurse Anes- thesia, Pediatric Primary Care Nursing, Pediatric Pulmonary Nursing, Perinatal Nursing, Adult/Child Psychiatric -Community Mental Health Nursing

Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Continuing Education in the Health Sciences: Postgraduate Courses

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

Public Health

Photographs: pages 2 and 4 by Carlos Rene Perez; page 15 by Roy Morosch; pages 16, 42, 56, and 151 by Joel Freid; page 54 by Jack Vartoogian

The Faculty of Medicine ^"^^^ ^Ul^J^S

College of Physicians & Surgeons

Columbia University Bulletin

HEALTH SCIENCES LIBR^^^ir COLUAii^TA UNiVEILSII^ 701 WEST 16Sth ST. NEW YOP,^^ M. ¥. 100^ •'"

1983-1984

mM*i

fiS^"^ .JT",

Contents

Academic Calendar 5

M<fealth Sciences Administration 8

Faculty of Medicine 8

College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals 17

Admission* Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid 25

Application for Admission, 25. Registration, 26. Regulations, 26. Auditing Courses, 27. Fees, 27. Application or Renewal of Application for a Degree, 29. Requests for Transcripts, 30. Estimated Expenses, 30. Housing, 30. Financial Aid, 31. Student and Alumni Activities, 40.

The Program of Instruction 43

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence, 43. Key to Course Numbers, 44. Sumrnary of Curriculum, 44. Basic Science arid Introductory Clinical Courses, 44. Major Clinical Year, 46. Fourth Year, 48; Special Programs, 49. Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship, 5L Prizes ahd Awards, 51.

Postgraduate Programs 55

Departments of Instruction 57

Anatomy and Cell Biology, 57. Anesthesiology, 58. Biochemistry, 62. Dermatology, 63. Human Genetics and Development, 65. Medicine, 66. Microbiology, 78. Neurological Surgery, 80. Neurology, 81. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 84. Ophthalmology, 88. Orthopedic Surgery, 91. Otolaryngology, 94. Pathology, 95. Pediatrics, 102. Pharmacology, 109. Physiology, 111. Psychiatry, 112. Public Health, 123. Radiolo- gy, 132. Rehabilitation Medicine, 137. Surgery, 140. Urology, 146.

Centers and Institutes 149

First- Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1982 152

Student Rosters 155

Index 167

Academic Calendar, 1983-1984

Major Religious Holidays

For a statement of University policy regarding religious holidays, see Admission. Registration. and Expenses Regulations.

Some of the major holidays occurring on weekdays are listed below. The Jewish holy days begin at sundown of the preceding day.

Monday or Tuesday, July 11 or 12 Id al Fitr

Thursday, Friday, September 8, 9 Rosh Hashanah

Friday or Saturday, September 16 or 17 Id al Adha

Saturday, September 17 Yom Kippur

Thursday, Friday, September 22, 23 First days of Succoth

Thursday, Friday, September 29, 30 Concluding days of Succoth

Tuesday, Wednesday, April 17, 18 First days of Passover

Friday, April 20 Good Friday

Monday, Tuesday, April 23, 24 Concluding days of Passover

Wednesday, Thursday, June 6, 7 Shavuoth

JUNE

6-17 Monday-Friday.* Registration for Classes of 1984 and 1985.

6 Monday. Academic year begins for Class of 1985.

14-15 Tuesday- Wednesday. NBME 1, Class of 1985. Passing is required for graduation.

27 Monday. Academic year begins for Class of 1984.

JULY

1 Friday. Class of 1984 reports to hospital rotations.

4 Monday. Independence Day observed for third- and fourth-year students.

5 Tuesday. Class of 1985 reports to hospital rotations.

AUGUST

1 Monday.t Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in October (see September 7).

22-26 Monday-Friday. Optional early registration for second-year students.

26-31 Friday- Wednesday. Orientation for first-year students.

29 Monday.* Registration for first-year students.

30 Tuesday.* Registration for second-year students.

'Students allowed to register after the period specified must pay a late fee. "f Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

6 ACADEMIC CALENDAR

SEPTEMBER

I Thursday. Academic year begins for first- and second-year students; late registration begins.

5 Monday. Labor Day holiday for first-, second-, third-, and fourth-year students.

6-7 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Board Part I Examination for students failing June 14-15 examination.

7 Wednesday. Last day to file late applications for October degrees.

27-28 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Board Part II Examination for fourth-year students. Passing is required for graduation.

OCTOBER

26 Wednesday. Award of October degrees.

NOVEMBER

4 Friday.* Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in January (see December 9).

8 Tuesday. Election Day. Half-day holiday for first- and second-year students.

24-25 Thursday-Friday. Thanksgiving holidays for first-, second-, third-, and fourth-year students.

DECEMBER

9 Friday. Last day to file late applications for January degrees.

17 Saturday, through January 2, Monday. Vacation for second- and third-year students.

20 Tuesday, through January 2, Monday. Vacation for first-year students.

JANUARY

3 Tuesday. Resumption of classes for first-, second-, and third-year students.

I I Wednesday. First semester ends for first-year students. 16 Monday. Second semester begins for first-year students. 25 Wednesday. Award of January degrees. FEBRUARY

20 Monday. Spring vacation for first- and second-year students.

21 Tuesday.* Last day to apply or reapply for all degrees to be conferred in May (see April 2).

MARCH

24 Saturday, through April 1, Sunday. Spring vacation for first- and second-year students.

'Students who apply after this date must pay a late fee.

ACADEMIC CALENDAR 7

APRIL

2 Monday. Last day to file late applications for May degrees.

3-4 Tuesday-Wednesday. National Board Part II Examination for students failing Septem- ber 27-28 examination.

MAY

2 Wednesday. Dean's Day for Medical Student Research.

16 Wednesday. Columbia University Commencement and Convocation of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

28 Monday. Memorial Day holiday for first-, second-, and third-year students. JUNE

2 Saturday through June 11, Monday. Study period for second-year students, NBME I.

8 Friday. Second semester ends for first-year students.

12-13 Tuesday- Wednesday. National Board Part I Examination. Passing is required for graduation.

1 1-15 Monday-Friday.* Registration for Class of 1986.

13 Wednesday. Academic year begins for Class of 1986.

15 Friday. Major Clinical Year concludes for third-year students.

26-28 Tuesday-Thursday.' Registration for Class of 1985.

29 Friday. Academic year begins for Class of 1985. JULY

2 Monday. Class of 1985 reports to hospital rotations.

4 Wednesday. Independence Day Holiday for third- and fourth-year students.

5 Thursday. Hospital rotations begin for Class of 1986.

Dates of National Board Examinations

Part I September 6-7, 1983. Not given at P&S.

June 12-13, 1984. Required by P&S.

Part II September 27-28, 1983. Required at P&S. April 3-4, 1984. Not given at P&S.

'Students allowed to register after the period specified must pay a late fee.

Health Sciences Administration

MICHAEL I. SOVERN, LL.B., LL.D. President of the University

ROBERT F. GOLDBERGER, M.D. Provost of the University

ROBERT I. LEVY, M.D. Vice President for Health Sciences

KATHLEEN MULLINEX, Ph.D. Vice Provost of the University

PHILIP J. SHARKEY, Ph.D. Deputy Vice President for Health Sciences

CHERYL GILLEN RICE, M.P.A. Assistant Vice President for Health Sciences Administra- tion

The Faculty of Medicine

DONALD F. TAPLEY, M.D. Dean of the Faculty of Medicine

THOMAS Q. MORRIS, M.D. Vice Dean

BERNARD CHALLENOR, M.D. Associate Dean for Hospital Affairs

RAYMOND J. DEVLIN, B.B.A. Associate Dean for Administrative Affairs

LINDA D. LEWIS, M.D. Associate Dean for Student Affairs

CHERYL GILLEN RICE, M.P.A. Associate Dean for Clinical Administration

DOROTHY ESTES, M.D. Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs

LESTER M. GELLER, M.D. Assistant Dean for Student and Curricular Affairs

KATHLEEN O'DONNELL, M.B.A., M.P.H. Assistant Dean for Administrative Affairs

JOANN S. JAMANN, Ed.D. Dean of the School of Nursing

ROBERT J. WEISS, M.D. Dean of the School of Public Health

MICHAEL O'CONNOR, M.P.A. Assistant Dean for Administration, School of Public Health

STEPHEN WOTMAN, D.D.S. Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs, School of Public Health

Executive Committee of the Faculty Council

Donald F. Tapley (chairman) Harold Dick Donald Kornfeld

Jennifer Bell Rose Ruth Ellison Elizabeth Mahoney

Robert Bertsch Michael Gershon Lewis P. Rowland

John Bilezikian Harold Ginsberg Kevin Sanborn

Martin Blank Douglas Ishii

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 9

Faculty Council of the Faculty of Medicine

Maxwell Abramson George B. Ambrose Philip O. Anderson Ernest April Robert B. Armstrong Kimball C. Atwood Leslie Baer Howard Bailit David Baker Laxmi Baxi David Befeler Henrik Bendixen Keith Bernstein Robert Bertsch Aaron Bhattacharyya John P. Bilezikian Martin Blank Roger Burnett Charles Campbell Charles Cantor Elizabeth Carter Herbert Cave Peter Danilo Barbara Decker Ralph Dell Salvatore DeMauro Darryl DeVivo Harold Dick Thomas Dillon Bruce Dohrenwend John Downey Ronald Drusin Philip Duffy Isidore Edelman Nas Eftekhar Rose Ruth Ellison Jean Endicott Bernard Erlanger John Fenoglio Jorge Fischbarg Max Forbes Karen Fountain Harold Fox Marguerite Gates Michael Gershon Elsa-Grace Giardina Harold Ginsberg Robert Glickman

Arnold Gold Rachel Goldstein Peter Gouras Carolyn Greenberg Leonard Harber Arthur Hays Margaret Heagerty Bernadette Hecox William Heird Brian Hoffman Peter Holt Barry Honig Cheng Chun Huang Nabil Husami Allen 1. Hyman Douglas Ishii Thomas P. Jacobs JoAnn Jamann William James Karen Kaplan Frederick Kass Michael Katz Jennifer Kelsey Thomas C. King Donald S. Kornfeld Dolores Kreisman Oscar Kruesi Conrad G. Lattes Phyllis C. Leppert Robert Levy Linda D. Lewis Arnold Lisio Elizabeth A. Mahoney Sidney Malitz Charles Marboe Eric Marcus Eric C. Martin Pat Martin Marie-France Maylie-Pfenninger Mary McGrath Dorothy Miller William Minogue Thomas Q. Morris Jane H. Morse Stanley J. Myers Pearila B. Namerow Hugh Nellans

Mero Nocenti Carl Olsson Carmen Ortiz-Neu Nigel Paneth Eugene Pantuck Timothy A. Pedley Richard N. Pierson, Jr. Conrad Pirani Kalmon Post Peter J. Puchner Donald Quest John D. Rainer Keith Rawlinson Keith Reemstma John Regan Helen Rodriguez-Trias Taube Rothman Lewis P. Rowland Kevin V. Sanborn Saul Sanders David Schachter Karl Schulze Malcolm Schvey Patrick Shrout Howard Shuman John Silver Saul Silverstein Michael Sovern Henry Spotnitz Bennett Stein David S. Svahn Hadassah Tamir Donald F. Tapley Herbert Thornhill Duane W. Todd Fred Van Natta Bonnie Ann Wallace Sylvan Wallenstein Stephen Wang Elizabeth Watkins Collin Weber Robert J. Weiss Ralph deVere White Walter A. Wichern Joachim Wigger Andrew Wit Stuart C. Yudofsky

10 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the Dean

Donald F. Tapley (chairman)

Maxwell Abramson

Charles Ashley

Richard Axel

Henrik Bendixen

John Benson

Donald Bradley

Charles J. Campbell

Robert Canfield

Charles Cantor

Bernard D. Challenor

Raymond Devlin

Harold Dick

John A. Downey

Philip Duffy

Isidore S. Edelman

Dorothy Estes

Allan Formicola Gary Gambuti Lester Geller Michael Gershon Harold S. Ginsberg Rachel Goldstein Leonard Harber Brian F. Hoffman JoAnn Jamann Eric Kandel Michael Katz Linda Lewis Sidney Malitz William F. Minogue Thomas Q. Morris Edward S. Noroian Kathleen O'Donnell

Clifford Ohle Carl Olsson Keith Reemstma Cheryl G. Rice David Rothman Lewis P. Rowland Diane Rulnick Charles T. Ryder William B. Seaman Philip J. Sharkey Samuel Silverstein Richard Sohn Bennett Stein Mervyn Susser Stephen F. Wang Robert J. Weiss Myron Winick

Committees

ADMISSIONS: Professor Andrew Frantz (chairman); Professors April, Ballard, Bell, Blank, Branche, Brust, Donn, Downey, Dunton, Forde, Frantz, Housepian, Jagiello, Jewett, Knowl- ton, McCormick, Nocenti, Ortiz-Neu, Pierson, Schullinger, Schwartz, Stock, Weidel. Ex officio: Dean Tapley, Professors Linda Lewis and Schachter. Student: James W. Roberts.

CURRICULUM: Professor Mero Nocenti (chairman); Professors Abramson, Arkow, Atwood, Bertsch, Birkhoff, Branwood, Brust, Cameron, Shu Chien, Despommier, Drusin, Eggers, J. Fenoglio, Fine, Ghez, Brian Hoffman, Stanley Meyers, Nunez, Ortiz-Neu, Petrie, Post, Eric Rose, Kevin Sanborn, Siris, B. D. Srinivasan. P. R. Srinivasan, Winick. Ex officio: Flora Atkins, Rachael Goldstein, Professors Lester Geller, Sidney Horowitz, and Linda Lewis. Students: Steven L. Brown, Eugene Coman, Trip Gulick, Marian Hodges, Steve Miller, and Rocky Schoen.

Delegates to the University Senate

Jennifer Bell, Leonard Brand, Welton Gersony, Allen Hyman, Thomas C. King, Richard N. Pierson, and I. Bernard Weinstein. Students: Andrew Kaplan and Marie Moss.

Joint Administrative Board

REPRESENTING COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY: Daniel F. Crowley, Thomas D. Flynn, David B. Hertz, Joan Konner, Walsh McDermott, Michael I. Sovern, W. Clarke Wescoe, and M. Moran Weston.

REPRESENTING PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL: John W. Brooks, Thomas H. Choate, Felix E. Demartini, George S. Dillon, Jon R. Katzenbach, Ralph F. Leach, Sidney J. Weinberg, Jr., and Myles V. Whalen, Jr.

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE H

Administrative Staff

TERI VAN TATENHOVE. Executive Assistant to the Vice President for Health Sciences

MARY J. SULLIVAN . Assistant to the Dean

JOHN L. BENSON. Business Officer

FRANCES FICKLEN. Financial Aid Officer

JOAN BENNIS. Director of the Office of Admissions

ADELAIDE ROTHE. Coordinator of Academic Appointments

GEORGE SUSKO. Associate Registrar

Officers Emeriti

HENRY AR ANOW, JR . Lambert Professor Emeritus of Medicine

HAROLD BARKER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

ANDREW L. BASSETT. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

VIOLA BERNARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

STANLEY BRADLEY . Bard Professor Emeritus of Medicine

HAROLD W. BROWN. Professor Emeritus of Parasitology

GORDON M. BRUCE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

LESTER CAHN. Professor Emeritus of Oral Pathology

MARY E. CALLAHAN. Professor Emeritus of Physical Therapy

ARTHUR CARR. Professor Emeritus of Medical Psychology

ROBERT CARROLL. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

ER WIN CH ARGAFF. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

JOHN J. CONLEY. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology

WILFRED M. COPENHAVER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

STUART COSGRIFF. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

ANDRE F. COURNAND. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

DAVID CO WEN . Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

GEORGE F. CRIKELAIR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

EDWARD C. CURNEN, JR. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

ROBERT C. DARLING. Simon Baruch Professor Emeritus of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

ELIZABETH B. DAVIS. Professor Emeritus of Qinical Psychiatry

ROBERT M. DAY. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

12 THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE

D. ANTHONY D'ESOPO. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

ZACH ARIAS DISCHE. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

HERBERT O. ELFTMAN. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

CARL FEIND. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

M . IRENE FERRER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

JOHN W. FERTIG. Professor Emeritus of Biostatistics

THOMAS D. FLEMING. Professor Emeritus of Library Science

CHARLES A. FLOOD. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

GOODWIN L. FOSTER. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

CHARLES L. FOX, JR. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology (in Surgery)

MARIE-LOUISE FRANCISCUS. Professor Emeritus of Occupational Therapy

ELIZABETH S. GILL. Professor Emeritus of Nursing

WILLIAM GOLDFARB. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

LEONARD J . GOLDWATER. Professor Emeritus of Occupational Medicine

RUTH J. GUTTM ANN . Professor Emeritus of Radiology

CUSHMAN D. HAAGENSEN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

MICHAEL HEIDELBERGER. Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry

GEORGE H. HUMPHREYS II. Mott Professor Emeritus of Surgery

HAROLD W. JACOX. Professor Emeritus of Radiology

A. GREGORY JAMESON. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

IRA S. JONES. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology

ERICH J. KAHN. Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

MAXWELL K ARSH AN . Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

AARON KARUSH. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry

FORREST E. KENDALL. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

PHILIP KNAPP. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology

LAWRENCE C. KOLB. Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

RAPHAEL LATTES. Professor Emeritus of Surgical Pathology

JOHN K. LATTIMER. Professor Emeritus of Urology

FERDINAND F. McALLISTER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

RUSTIN McINTOSH. Carpentier Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

RICHARD L. MASLAND. H. Houston Merritt Professor Emeritus of Neurology

AUBRE M AYNARD. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Surgery

THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE 13

GEORGE R. MERRIAM, JR. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Ophthalmology/

FREDERICK A. METTLER. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

KARL MEYER. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LESTER A. MOUNT. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurological Surgery

MARGARET R. MURRAY. Professor Emeritus of Anatomy

DAVID NACHMANSOHN. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

HELEN F. PETTIT. Professor Emeritus of Nursing

KERMIT PINES. Clinical Professor Emeritus of Medicine

J . LAWRENCE POOL. Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery

HERBERT R ACKOW. Professor Emeritus of Anesthesiology

HARRY M. ROSE. Borne Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

CHARLES T. RYDER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

THOMAS V. SANTULLI. Professor Emeritus of Surgery

EDWARD B. SCHLESINGER. Byron Stookey Professor Emeritus of Neurological Surgery

WILLIAM B. SEAMAN. Picker Professor Emeritus of Radiology

WILLIAM H. SEBRELL, JR. Williams Professor Emeritus of Nutrition

BEATRICE C. SEEGAL. Professor Emeritus of Microbiology

LAWRENCE W. SLOAN. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Surgery

HAMILTON SOUTHWORTH. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine

WARREN M. SPERRY. Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

DAVID SPRINSON . Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry

LEO SROLE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Social Sciences in Psychiatry

HERBERT C. STOERK. Professor Emeritus of Pathology

FRANK E. STINCHFIELD. Professor Emeritus of Orthopedic Surgery

JOHN V. TAGGART. Dalton Professor Emeritus of Physiology and Medicine

HOWARD C. TAYLOR, JR. Rappleye Professor Emeritus of Obstetrics and Gynecology

JUERGEN TONDORFF. Professor Emeritus of Otolaryngology

FRANK W. VAN DYKE. Professor Emeritus of Public Health (Administrative Medicine)

CARMEN T. VICALE. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Neurology

JULES G. WALTNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Otolaryngology SHIH-CHUN WANG. Gusta vus A. Pfeiffer Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology SIDNEY C. WERNER. Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine ARTHUR B. WERTHEIM. Professor Emeritus of Medicine

14 THE FACULTY Of MEDICINE

ROGER WILLIAMS. Professor Emeritus of Public Health (Medical Entomology)

SAMUEL M. WISHIK. Professor Emeritus of Public Health (Public Health Practice)

ABNER WOLF. Professor Emeritus of Neuropathology

JAMES WOLFF. Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

JOSEPH ZUBIN. Professor Emeritus of Psychology

1

'f^li

The College of Physicians and Surgeons and Affiliated Hospitals

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is guided by the principle that medical education is university education. The acquisition of knowledge and skills is important in professional education, but far more vital is a profound understanding of the science, the art, and the ethic within which both knowledge and skill are applied. As a part of Columbia University, the College builds its curriculum, selects its officers of instruction, and marshals its enormous resources of equipment and clinical experience to develop in the student this understanding of medicine. Within the curriculum for the M.D. degree is the fundamental knowledge upon which later specialization is built, and from which the natural bent is discovered toward general or special practice, or toward research, teaching, or administration. The postgraduate programs of the College provide training in the specialties, help the graduate physician to keep abreast of new knowledge, and support the research from which the physician's knowledge develops.

Statement of Nondiscriminatory Policies

The University is required by certain Federal statutes and administrative regulations to publish the following statements:

Consistent with the requirements of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, as amended, and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R., the University does not discriminate on the basis of sex in the conduct or operation of its education programs or activities (including employment therein and admission thereto). Inquiries concerning the application of Title IX and Part 86 of 45 C.F.R. may be referred to Ms. Rosalind S. Fink, the Director of the University's Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action (305 Low Memorial Library, New York, N.Y. 10027, telephone 212-280-5511), or to the Director, Office for Civil Rights (Region II), 26 Federal Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10007.

Columbia University admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the University. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other University-administered programs.

Consistent with the requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and Part 84 of 45 C.F.R. , the University does not discriminate on the basis of handicap in admission or access to, or employment in, its programs and activities. Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified handicapped workers.

The University in addition desires to call attention to other laws and regiilations that protect employees, students, and applicants.

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin in programs or activities receiving Federal financial assistance. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, prohibits employment discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. Executive Order 11246, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin and requires affirmative action to ensure equality of opportunity in all aspects of employ- ment.

The Equal Pay Act of 1963 prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in rates of pay. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended, prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of age.

The Columbia University Senate on December 1, 1978, passed a resolution announcing its general educational policy on discrimination which reaffirms the University's commitment to nondiscriminatory policies in the above-mentioned categories, as well as its policy not to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.

18 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

Section 402 of the Vietnam Era Veterans' Readjustment Assistance Act of 1974, as amended, prohibits job discrimination and requires affirmative action to employ and advance in employment qualified special disabled veterans and veterans of the Vietnam era.

All employees, students, and applicants are protected from coercion, intimidation, interfer- ence or discrimination for filing a complaint or assisting in an investigation under any of the foregoing policies and laws.

The University's Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action has also been designated to coordinate the University's compliance activities under each of the programs referred to above. Any employee who believes that he or she has been denied equal opportunity should contact this Office, which will investigate complaints and counsel employees on questions relating to equal opportunity and affirmative action.

Reservation of University Rights

This bulletin is intended for the guidance of persons applying for or considering application for admission to Columbia University and for the guidance of Columbia students and faculty. The bulletin sets forth in general the manner in which the University intends to proceed with respect to the matters set forth herein, but the University reserves the right to depart without notice from the terms of this bulletin. This bulletin is not intended to be and should not be regarded as a contract between the University and any student or other person.

History of the College and University

Columbia University began as King's College, which was founded in 1754 by royal grant of George II, King of England, "for the Instruction of Youth in the Learned Languages, and the Liberal Arts and Sciences." The American Revolution interrupted its program, but in 1784 it was reopened as Columbia College. In 1912 the title was changed to Columbia University in the City of New York.

King's College organized a medical faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the North American Colonies to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine. The first graduates in medicine from the College were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam, who received the degree of Bachelor of Medicine in May 1769, and that of Doctor of Medicine in May 1770 and May 1771, respectively. Instruction in medicine was given until interrupted by the Revolution and the occupation of New York by the British, which lasted until November 25, 1783. In 1784 instruction was resumed in the academic departments, and in December of the same year the medical faculty was reestablished. In 1814 the medical faculty of Columbia College was merged with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, which had obtained an independent charter in 1807. In 1860, by agreement between the Trustees of the two institutions, the College of Physicians and Surgeons became the Medical Department of Columbia College; from that time on the diplomas of the graduates were signed by the President of Columbia College as well as by the President of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The connection was only a nominal one, however, until 1891, when the college was incorporated as an integral part of the University. Since September 1917, women have been admitted to the College on the same basis as men.

The Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center was opened in the spring of 1928, seven years after the establishment of a permanent alliance between Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital. It consists of the following units: the divisions of the University Faculty of Medicine (the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the School of Nursing, the School of Public Health); the University School of Dental and Oral Surgery; the Presbyterian Hospital and its subdivisions; the New York State Psychiatric Institute; and the Washington Heights Health and Teaching Center.

The Medical Center occupies a plot of land given to Columbia University and the Presbyterian Hospital by Mrs. Stephen V. Harkness and Mr. Edward S. Harkness. It comprises

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 19

about twenty acres extending from West 165th Street to West 168th Street and from Broadway to Riverside Drive and is readily accessible from all parts of the city. A map of the Medical Center is given on the inside back cover.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons is at 630 West 168th Street between Broadway and Fort Washington Avenue in a seventeen-story building, each floor of which connects with the wards and services of the Presbyterian Hospital. The William Black Medical Research Building is a twenty-story building, containing research laboratories for the faculty members of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. It is connected with the College building and is located at 168th Street and Fort Washington Avenue. The Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, a twenty-story structure diagonally opposite the William Black Medical Research Building, opened its teaching, research, and library facilities in 1976.

Augustus C. Long Health Sciences Library

The Columbia University Health Sciences Library is housed in the Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center, 701 West 168th Street. The four floors occupied by the library offer a comfortable atmosphere conducive to study, including such amenities as individual study carrels, group study and conference rooms, typing rooms, and a leisure reading lounge.

With more than 380,000 volumes and a stafif of 44, the Health Sciences Library is one of the largest medical center libraries in the United States. It is well able to serve the needs of faculty, students, and researchers in the health sciences disciplines. More than 3,200 periodicals are received regularly. The library includes a comprehensive media center equipped with audiovisual materials and equipment, as well as a significant rare book and special collections section. In addition to traditional reference services, the library offers computerized literature searching on several data bases, including MEDLARS. Materials describing library services are available on request.

Other Columbia libraries, located on the Momingside campus, are open to all students and faculty who carry Columbia identification cards. The main collection is housed in Butler Library; special and departmental collections are housed in other buildings on the campus. Columbia students and faculty are also permitted access to the collections of approximately twenty-five other research institutions including Stanford and Yale Universities, under the auspices of the Research Libraries Group. Information about the Research Libraries Group can be obtained from the Health Sciences Library.

Comprehensive Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research

The Ceincer Research Center was established in 1973. In 1977 it was designated the Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research. In 1979 the Center was awarded Comprehensive status by the National Cancer Institute in recognition of its broad responsibility for research, patient care, aind cancer control activities. The Center coordinates, integrates, and facilitates cancer research, education, and patient care in the Health Sciences Faculties of Columbia University and its affiliated hospitab in New York City Presbyterian, St. Luke's, Roosevelt, Harlem as well as Overlook in Summit, New Jersey, and Morristown Memorial Hospital in New Jersey. The Cancer Center was organized to effect the efficient and cooperative use of all Center resources, maximize the dissemination of information among Center personnel, and facilitate the rapid translation of cancer research findings into programs for improving capabilities for the prevention of cancer and the care of patients with cancer.

The Institute of Cancer Research of Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, was established in 1911 with funds bequeathed to the University by George Crocker. It moved from its original quarters on 116th Street to the campus of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in 1938.

The Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Institute of Cancer Research were separated in 1980 to function as two separate entities. While both are mutually involved in a clinical and basic research ccincer effort, their administrations function autonomously.

20 COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS

The Centers for Community Health

The Centers for Community Health are composed of a Center for Health Services Research and a Collaborative Program in Oral Health with the School of Dental and Oral Surgery whose research program is one of the few in the country directed toward an area of health services which has long been neglected. The Centers provide a locus for student teaching and research by the Faculty of Medicine and the School of Public Health, especially health administration, on problems of the delivery, financing, and distribution of health care in a diverse group of institutions in the inner city and the suburbs.

Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology

The Center was established and funded by the Faculty of Medicine and the New York State Office of Mental Health and is a rich resource for teaching and research in geriatrics and gerontology in a group of medical as well as long-term care facilities and in community settings. The Center designated by the Administration on Aging as a long-term care gerontology center is for HHS region II. With major funding from the Administration, it is one of the nine regional programs on long-term care. The Center has forged development of models for an alliance between the University and the community providers of care for the development of services to the elderly. Its major focus is research and the care of the elderly.

Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center

The Sergievsky Center is a center for research in the epidemiology of epilepsy, cerebral palsy, and developmental brain disorders. The center has a core scientific faculty concerned with the development of research in the epidemiology of those diseases. Funded with an endowment, it participates in the teaching programs of the Epidemiology Division of the School of Public Health and the Departments of Neurology and Pediatrics and provides a major resource in epidemiology research and training in neuroepidemiology.

Institute of Human Nutrition

The Institute of Human Nutrition is an interdisciplinary unit whose mission is to study all aspects of nutrition that relate to human health. The Institute is organized into three primary divisions: Growth and Development, Nutrition and Metabolism, and Community Nutrition. Although each division conducts its own research program and offers its own program of instruction, these are highly integrated in order to achieve two basic goals: research in all areas of human nutrition and an integrated teaching program in areas of nutrition relevant to the physician and medical scientist.

To achieve this integration of purpose and at the same time allow for the specialization necessary for the best research and teaching, combined research projects between the divisions are under way, and joint seminars and courses involving faculty and students in all three divisions are conducted. Constant interchange of ideas is fostered through weekly combined staff conferences and special lectures which are open to the medical center community. Through its Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy, and postdoctoral programs, the Institute aims to train individuals for scholarly activities in university and research centers that are in the forefront of the movement to advance nutrition as a health science.

The facilities of the Institute include laboratories in the William Black Medical Research Center, and the Obesity Center and Nutrition and Metabolic Research Center at St. Luke's Hospital Center. The office of the Director and other administrative offices are located on the seventh floor of the Health Sciences Center.

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 21

International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction

The International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction was founded in 1965 by Dr. Howard C. Taylor and was made possible by a substantial grant from the Ford Foundation. The primary purpose of the founders was to foster research in the sciences relevant to the solution of the world population problem. In more recent years, the aims of the Institute have been interpreted more broadly to include teaching, research, and the provision of clinical and social services related to the reproductive health of men and women. The Institute now consists of three centers.

The Center for Reproductive Sciences is composed of an interdisciplinary group of investigators devoting themselves to the study of the biochemical and physiological aspects of reproduction in men and women. It also comprises a clinical division involved in the diagnosis and treatment of the diseases of female reproduction.

The aims of the Center for Population and Family Health are more specifically relevant to the social consequences of human reproduction. The Center's community-oriented Reproduc- tive Health Services for Women Unit, in cooperation with the division of ambulatory care of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, provides care, with emphasis on services for adolescents, to the community surrounding the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center. The Center's International Research and Technical Assistance Unit works with a number of foreign governments and with private organizations toward improved basic health and family planning services for poor people in developing countries. The Social Sciences Research Unit conducts ongoing evaluations of the Center's domestic reproductive service programs and carries out a basic research program on the causes and consequences of adolescent fertility. Finally, as a division of the School of Public Health, the Center provides academic programs leading to the M.P.H. and Dr.P.H. degrees in the fields of population/family planning, maternal and child health, and public health nutrition.

A third unit has recently been added to the Institute: the Center for Male Reproduction. The Center consists of an interdisciplinary group of basic scientists and clinicians engaged in the study and treatment of the diseases of the male reproductive system.

The offices of the Centers for Reproductive Sciences and for Male Reproduction are at 630 West 168th Street and the office for the Center for Population and Family Health is at 60 Haven Avenue, Floor B-3, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Affiliated Hospitals

The Presbyterian Hospital in the City of New York

Founded in 1868, the Hospital joined with the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons to form the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, which opened in 1928. Under the terms of the permanent alliance agreement with Columbia University, members of the hospital staff are appointed by the Board of Trustees of the hospital on nomination by the Trustees of the University. The Presbyterian Hospital has an overall capacity of 1,291 beds and 48 bassinets. Plans call for a major modernization effort to begin in 1984.

The Hospital includes all of the individual units described below:

Presbyterian Hospital is the single largest hospital pavilion.

The New York Orthopaedic Hospital opened as a dispensary in 1866 largely because of the interest taken in the care of the crippled by Theodore Roosevelt, father of the president of the same name. The hospital was located in its own buildings at 420 East 59th Street until December 1950, when it was merged with the Presbyterian Hospital as its orthopedic service.

Squier Urological Clinic is the Urology Service of the Presbyterian Hospital.

22 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

Shane Hospital for Women, currently the Hospital's obstetrics and gynecology unit, was built at West 59th Street and Amsterdam Avenue and presented to Columbia University by Mr. and Mrs. William D. Sloane in 1886. It now is part of the Presbyterian Hospital's new Center for Women and Children.

Harkness Pavilion, erected when the Medical Center was established in 1928, is available for the accommodation of private and semiprivate patients from various services.

Babies Hospital, founded in 1887, provides for general medical and surgical care of infants and children up to their late teens, and care for premature babies. It is now part of the Center for Women and Children.

Neurological Institute, one of the first nongovernmental hospitals in the country for the treatment of diseases of the nervous system, was founded in 1909. It moved from East 67th Street to the Medical Center in 1929. The Institute includes facilities added in 1960 for psychiatric patients. It comprises the Hospital's Neurology and Neurological Surgery Services.

The Edwards. Harkness Eye Institute, site of the Hospital's Ophthalmology Service, opened in 1933. It has complete facilities for the medical and surgical treatment of adults and children with diseases of the eye. On January 1, 1940, the work of the Herman Knapp Memorial Eye Hospital was taken over by the Institute.

Vanderbilt Clinic was presented to Columbia University by the Vanderbilt family in 1888 and is the outpatient department for the Presbyterian Hospital.

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital in Cooperstown, New York, is a rural hospital combining the characteristics of a university medical center with a dedication to the delivery of both primary health services to the local community and highly specialized services to a large referral area. The hospital has 180 beds and a staff of specialists who are all salaried and full time. In 1982 there were 139,000 visits to the Outpatient Department and 6,250 admissions. The teaching program for house staff and students is a highly personalized one based on a team approach to medical care. Members of the staff conduct biomedical research and are interested in models for the delivery of health care to the community. The library is unusually extensive for a hospital of this size, with over 22,000 volumes and about 600 subscribed journals. Since 1947 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia, and currently about 60 students from Columbia elect programs at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital.

Harlem Hospital Center

Hariem Hospital Center, founded in 1887, is a general hospital of nearly 1,000 beds serving Central Harlem and environs, responsible for the care of approximately 400,000 people. The College of Physicians and Surgeons, through a contractual arrangement with the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, is responsible for all professional services in this hospital and nominates its entire professional staff.

This affiliation presents a unique opportunity for teaching students, interns, and residents in the traditional disciplines of medicine and provides increasing opportunities for involvement in community medicine.

The Helen Hayes Hospital

The Helen Hayes Hospital at West Haverstraw, New York, founded in 1900, is an independent rehabilitation hospital with complete medical services, owned and operated by the

AFFILIATED HOSPITALS 23

state through the New York State Health Department. Since 1966 the hospital has had a formal affiliation with Columbia University. The medical specialties and allied health profes- sionals are organized into disability units that provide comprehensive care through an integrated team approach, providing unique educational opportunities for residents and allied health students. The hospital has over 800 admissions and 12,000 outpatient visits a year. In 1980 a new 206-bed hospital building was opened, work began on construction of new research quarters, and plans were completed for establishment of several major new research centers. The hospital's long-standing program of bioengineering research now becomes the Orthopedic Engineering and Research Center; to this will be added the Regional Bone Center, Regional Arthritis Center, and Neurology Center.

Morristown Memorial Hospital

Morristown Memorial Hospital is a regional hospital center offering comprehensive health services for the entire family. It is a voluntary, nonprofit institution with a history of community service dating back to 1892. The hospital has become a central health care facility serving Morris, Warren, Sussex, and Somerset counties, and a medical referral center for all of northwest New Jersey. Morristown Memorial is also a teaching hospital, with programs for medical, nursing, and technical staff. It became affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1979. Morristown Memorial, Overlook Hospital in Summit, and St. Barnabas Hospital in Livingston are members of the Shared Services Consortium pioneering regionalized health care services in northern New Jersey. With 669 beds, 1,800 employees, 550 nurses, a medical and dental staff of more than 450, and a full spectrum of basic and highly specialized services, Morristown Memorial combines the traditional advantages of a community hospital with the advanced capabilities of a progressive medical center. The hospital has two divisions: one where the emphasis is on acute care; the other, a center for preadmission testing, geriatric extended care, outpatient and alcoholic services, and planned facilities for subacute and rehabilitative care.

Overlook Hospital

Overlook Hospital in Summit, New Jersey, is a 551-bed suburban community hospital, founded in 1906, which became a teaching affiliate of the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1975. It is a general, voluntary, nonprofit institution accommodating 20,000 inpatients and 100,000 outpatients each year. Overlook offers particularly strong training in family practice and primary care internal medicine and pediatrics through a program of broad-based clinical experience for graduate physicians. Outreach programs have been pioneered in alcoholism and other addictive illness, home-care and home-based hospice, and mobile intensive care utilizing paramedics. The hospital's Center for Community Health provides outpatient services including preadmission testing, ambulatory surgery and radiology, and a consumer health library. A construction/renovation project, which will increase the bed complement by 84, was initiated in 1983.

St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

St. Luke's Hospital Center, which has included Woman's Hospital since 1953, merged with The Roosevelt Hospital in 1979, forming a Hospital Center containing 1,315 beds and serving a catchment area spanning Manhattan's west side from 34th to 134th Streets. Both hospitals had maintained teaching affiliations with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University for many years before 1971, when they each became full University hospitals. Under the terms of the affiliation with Columbia University, new members of the medical staff are appointed by the Hospital Center's Board of Trustees after they have received appointments as officers of instruction at the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The medical

24 AFFILIATED HOSPITALS

staff of the Hospital Center numbers over 1,200; the house staff consists of approximately 400 fellows and residents.

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division

St. Luke's was established in 1850 and has been on Morningside Heights next to the main Columbia campus since 1896. It merged with Woman's Hospital in 1953, and today the hospital complex contains 780 beds, including 63 pediatric beds, 58 obstetric beds, and 58 bassinets. Approximately 26,500 patients are admitted yearly to the four major and eleven specialty services.

St. Luke's is recognized as a leader in such fields as heart surgery, kidney transplantation, artificial kidney treatments, and noninvasive diagnosis (ultrasound). The Hospital Center's clinically oriented research projects are involved in such areas as blood diseases, coronary artery disease, gastroenterology, obesity and nutrition (it is the site of the only federally funded obesity research center), pulmonary disease, renal transplant-immunology, and bioengineering. A medical library of 32,000 volumes is an integral part of the Hospital Center. St. Luke's is both a major referral institution and a community hospital. The more than fifty specialty and subspecialty clinics see 50,000 patients yearly (totaling approximately 180,000 visits); the Emergency Room is one of the busiest in Manhattan, with 77,000 visits annually. The Hospital Center also operates extensive community programs in alcoholism treatment, drug detoxifica- tion, and mental health.

Roosevelt Hospital Division

The Roosevelt Hospital treated its first patient in 1871. It contains 535 beds and bassinets. There are about 180,000 outpatient and emergency-room visits annually. Approximately 19,000 patients are admitted to this hospital yearly. The hospital is engaged in many research and teaching activities. A new research building containing 52,000 square feet of laboratory space for all departments was opened in 1973. The medical library contains 26,000 volumes and subscribes to 540 medical and technical journals. The hospital is actively engaged in community programs, as represented by its Children and Youth Program and by its Drug Addiction and Alcoholism Programs and many other outreach and community services sponsored by the Departments of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, and Medicine, and the ambulatory care division. The hospital's new emergency room treats over 51,000 people yearly.

New York State Psychiatric Institute

The Institute was built and is maintained by the New York State Office of Mental Health. Through a contractual arrangement, it is affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The Institute's functions are to provide the highest quality of clinical care for patients with psychiatric disorders, to provide education for mental health professionals, and to do research into the causes and treatment of psychiatric illness. The Institute currently maintains sixteen major research laboratories, a hospital, and a wide variety of specialized outpatient depart- ments which provide diagnostic and treatment programs. The Lawrence C. Kolb Research Annex, a thirteen-story facility dedicated to psychiatric research, was opened in the spring of 1982.

Admission, Registration, Expenses, and Financial Aid

Entering classes are enrolled in the College in September of each year. The minimum requirement for admission is attendance for three full academic years at an approved college of arts and sciences. Most applicants present four academic years and a bachelor's degree, although these are not required. The composition of our entering classes indicates, however, that only a relatively small number of three-year students have been accepted in the past by our Committee on Admissions.

The college program must have included English, physics, biology, organic chemistry (including at least one semester of laboratory), and some other course in chemistry covering at least one academic year. These requirements have been designated as mandatory not only by our faculty but by various state medical licensure boards as well; accordingly, applicants cannot be excused from them. Courses in genetics and embryology will be useful but are not required. Students applying for admission must also have taken the Medical College Admission Test in the spring or autumn of the year of application, but only if the test scores will be sent to medical schools in the State of New York; if the scores will not be sent to this school, the requirement will be waived for all applicants. The student may have concentrated in any area in the natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, or arts— but evidence of a balanced education, as well as demonstrated interest and ability in the natural sciences, is preferred.

Application Procedure

Application for admission must be filed on a special form obtained from the Admissions Office of the Faculty of Medicine. Applications should be submitted as promptly as possible, though they are accepted only for the next incoming class; requests for application forms may be submitted one year in advance of registration. The completed form must be accompanied by the application fee of $40. The fee helps to cover the cost of processing the application; it is therefore not returnable and is not credited toward tuition.

Applicants will be notified when their applications have been received. The Committee on Admissions, however, evaluates only completed applications, that is, those for which letters of recommendation have been received, along with MCAT scores and transcripts. Applicants will be notified, also, when their applications have been completed; if such notification is not received within sixty days after the date of the preliminary processing of an application, applicants should make inquiries at the Admissions Office to learn which items have not yet been received. Failure to receive letters of recommendation and transcripts is the most common cause of delay in the completion of applications.

If a personal interview is required in connection with the application, it will be requested only by the Admissions Office.

Selection of Students

The Committee on Admissions devotes months to the task of selecting a class of 148 from a very large number of applicants. Obviously there will be many well-qualified students whom the College will not be able to accept. The Faculty of Medicine recognizes its obligations in the field of medical education and research not only to the local area but to the nation as well. Admission will not be offered to any applicant who has not been interviewed by one of the College's representatives. Impressions from such an interview, as well as scores on the MCAT and academic records, will be considered in selecting individuals for admission. Other selection criteria are listed below.

The Committee places great importance on the fact that the students have learned to think for themselves, to explore, to work hard under their own initiative, to consider alternatives and make decisions, and to develop a desire for a continuous program of self-education. In the

26 REGISTRATION REGULATIONS

selection of students, preference is given to those who, in the opinion of the Committee on Admissions, have shown high achievement in their college education, a mature sense of values, sound motivation, qualities of leadership, and ability to assume responsibility, and to those who have already given evidence that they are qualified to complete all requirements of our curriculum and to graduate as ethical, compassionate, and competent physicians.

The practice of medicine is both a science and an art and, to treat the patient as a whole person, the doctor must be a whole person. Students planning a career in medicine should be motivated toward becoming leaders in medical thinking, rather than technicians, because medical practice is both a private enterprise and a public responsibility. The liberal arts college offers the opportunity to prepare for a happier and more useful life of citizenship. Years of specialization lie ahead in a professional career, but the foundation of all advanced study is a broad liberal education, of which science is a part.

Admission to Advanced Standing

Only a very small number of vacancies occur during the medical course, and students can be accepted on transfer from other schools only when such vacancies do arise. Any student desiring to transfer from an accredited school of medicine to the upper classes of the College should communicate with the Admissions Office to learn if a vacancy exists.

Admission of Foreign Students

Applicants need not be citizens of this country but preferably should have received their premedical education at an accredited college or university in the United States or Canada. Applications may be submitted by individuals who have been educated elsewhere, but in the past the Committee on Admissions has had great difficulty in finding a satisfactory means of evaluating the caliber of education available in the many colleges and universities throughout the world. Likewise, the Committee will accept applications for admission with advanced standing to this school from individuals who have begun their medical education in schools outside the United States and Canada, but again it has usually been able to admit relatively few individuals, either to an entering class or with advanced standing, whose previous education has not been obtained in this country or Canada.

Registration

Before attending classes, each student must register in person at the Office of Student Information Services during the registration period listed in the Academic Calendar. The Office of Student Information Services, on the first floor of the Black Building, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.

All students are asked to give Social Security numbers when registering in the University. However, Social Security numbers are required of foreign students only when those students will be receiving payment from the University. Foreign students should consult the Office of Foreign Student Services, 208 Lewisohn Hall, for further information. Other students who do not have Social Security numbers should obtain them from their local Social Security offices well in advance of registration.

Students who are not citizens of the United States and who need authorization for special billing of tuition and/or fees to foreign institutions, agencies, or sponsors should go to the Foreign Student Adviser with two copies of the sponsorship letter. Special billing authorization is required of students whose bills are to be sent to a third party for payment.

Regulations

According to University regulations, each person whose registration has been completed will be considered a student of the University during the term for which he or she is registered unless the student's connection with the University is officially severed by withdrawal or otherwise. No

REGULATIONS AUDITING COURSES FEES 27

student registered in any school or college of the University shall at the same time be registered in any other school or college, either of Columbia University or of any other institution, without the specific authorization of the dean or director of the school or college of the University in which he or she is first registered.

The privileges of the University are not available to any student until he or she has completed registration. A student who is not officially registered for a University course may not attend the course unless granted auditing privileges (see below). No student may register after the stated period without the written consent of the appropriate dean or director.

The University reserves the right to withhold the privilege of registration or any other University privilege from any person with unpaid indebtedness to the University.

Conduct

All members of the University community, its visitors and guests, are governed by the Rules of University Conduct, which apply to all demonstrations, including rallies and picketing, that take place on or at a University facility. It is the student's responsibility to be aware of all provisions, regulations, and procedures contained in the Rules. Copies are available in the Office of the University Senate, 406 Low Memorial Library.

Attendance

Students are held accountable for absences incurred owing to late enrollment.

Religious Holidays

It is the policy of the University to respect its members' observance of their major religious holidays. Officers of administration and of instruction responsible for the scheduling of required academic activities or essential services are expected to avoid conflict with such holidays as much as possible. Such activities include examinations, registration, and various deadlines that are a part of the academic calendar. (See the Academic Calendar for dates of religious holidays.)

Where scheduling conflicts prove unavoidable, no student will be penalized for absence for religious reasons, and alternative means will be sought for satisfying the academic require- ments involved. If a suitable arrangement cannot be worked out between the student and the instructor involved, students and instructors should consult the appropriate dean or director. If an additional appeal is needed, it may be taken to the Provost.

Auditing Courses

Degree candidates in good standing who are enrolled for a full-time program in the current term may audit one or two courses (except during the summer term) in any division of the University without charge by filing a formal application in the Registrar's Office (Black Building, Room 138) no later than September 9 in the autumn term and January 26 in the spring term. Applications require (a) the certification of the Registrar that the student is eligible to audit and (b) the approval of the dean of the school in which the courses are offered.

For obvious reasons, elementary language courses, studio courses, applied music courses, laboratory courses, and seminars are not open to auditors; other courses may be closed because of space limitations. In no case will an audited course appear on a student's record, nor is it possible to turn an audited course into a credit course by paying the fee after the fact. Courses previously taken for credit may not be audited.

Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute, are in effect for 1983-1984 and are subject to change at the discretion of the Trustees.

University charges such as tuition and fees, residence halls, and board plans may be paid at

28 FEES

the student's convenience during the term. The full amount of any charge may be paid when due without penalty, or payment may be made in installments. If partial payments are made, a finance charge is assessed on amounts not paid by the due date shown on the monthly bill. Effective in the autumn term of 1981, the finance charge was increased to 1.5 percent a month. In either event, however, the student is required to sign a Retail Installment Credit Agreement at the time of registration that sets forth the full terms and conditions of payment. All charges must be paid by the end of the term.

Tuition, the health service fee, the health insurance premium, and special fees are payable each term as part of registration. If these fees are paid after the last day of registration (see Academic Calendar), they will not be reduced, and a minimum late fee of $50 will be imposed. Checks for tuition and fees should be made payable to Columbia University.

It is the policy of the University to withhold diplomas, certificates, and transcripts until all financial obligations have been met. Candidates for graduation are urged to pay their bills in full at least one month prior to graduation.

In the event a diploma, certificate, or transcript is withheld because of an unpaid bill, a student will be required to use a certified check, money order, or cash to release any of the aforementioned documents.

Tuition

For the full course in medicine for one academic year (or the equivalent), payable in two installments $11,346.00

Health Service and Hospital Insurance Fees

The following fees, prescribed by statute, are subject to change at the discretion of the Trustees. For all full-time students, per year (September 1 -August 31)

Health service fee $285.00

Hospital insurance premium 222.00

The student health service fee contributes to the cost of operating the Student Health Service. The hospital insurance fee pays the annual premium to the Associated Hospital Service of New York. Participation in these programs is compulsory for all full-time students; students who already carry hospital insurance, however, will be charged the health service fee only. Proof of comparable coverage must be shown at the time of registration. Upon payment of additional fees, students can acquire hospital insurance coverage for their dependents and the latter are eligible to receive the benefits of the health service program. Students should consult the Office of the Registrar, Black Building, Room 138, for further information on dependent coverage.

The Student Health Service, which holds daily office hours, is on the street level of Bard Haven Tower 1 (60 Haven Avenue).

Application Fees

For admission $40.00

For late application, or late renewal of application, for a degree 50.00

Late Registration Fees

FuH-Time Part-Time

During late registration $ 50.00 $ 50.00

After late registration 100.00 100.00

FEES APPLICATION OR RENEWAL OF APPLICATION FOR A DEGREE 29

Withdrawal and Adjustment of Fees

A student in good academic standing who is not subject to discipline will always be given an honorable dismissal if he or she wishes to withdraw from the University. Withdrawal is defined as the dropping of one's entire program in a given semester as opposed to dropping a portion of one's program.

Any student withdrawing must notify the Office of Student Information Services in writing: failure to attend classes or notification of instructors does not constitute formal withdrawal and will result in failing grades in all courses. Any adjustment of the tuition that the student has paid is reckoned from the date on which the Office receives the student's written notification. Application fees, late fees, and special fees are not refundable.

Up to and including the second Saturday after the first day of classes, tuition will be retained in the following amount;

Full-time study Part-time study

$75.00 40.00

After the second Saturday after the first day of classes in the term, the above amount is retained, plus an additional percentage of the remaining tuition (as indicated in the schedule below), for each week, or part of a week, of the term up to the date on which the student's written notice of withdrawal is received by the Office of Student Information Services.

Adjustment Schedule

Second Saturday after first

day of classes Week following second

Saturday after first day

of classes Second following week Third following week Fourth following week Fifth following week Sixth following week Seventh following week Eighth following week

Minimum Fees

Percentage of

Retained

Remaining Tuition Retained

$40 or $75

0

40 or 75

10

40 or 75

20

40 or 75

30

40 or 75

45

40 or 75

60

40 or 75

75

40 or 75

90

40 or 75

100 (no adjustment)

Application or Renewal of Application for a Degree

Degrees are awarded three times a year in October, January, and May. A candidate for any Columbia degree (except the Ph.D. degree) must file an application with the Registrar, 630 West 168th Street. In the 1983-1984 academic year, the last day to file for an October degree is August 1; for a January degree, November 4; and for a May degree, February 20. A late fee of $50 will be charged after these dates and until the expiration of the late filing period for each conferral date (September 7 for October degrees, December 9 for January degrees, April 2 for May degrees). Applications received after the late filing period will automatically be applied to the next conferral date.

If the student fails to earn the degree by the conferral date for which he or she has made application, the student may renew the application. A $50 late fee will be charged for late filing of renewals of application according to the same schedule as for original applications (see above.)

30 TRANSCRIPTS ESTIMATED EXPENSES HOUSING

Requests for Transcripts

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 as amended prohibits the release of educational records by institutions without the specific written consent of the student or alumnus. Students or alumni may request copies of their records by writing to the Office of Student Information Services, Columbia University, 138 Black Building, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032. Official copies will be sent directly by the University only to an official address such as another university, a business firm, or government agency. However, students or alumni may request that unofficial copies of their transcripts (stamped "Student Copy") be sent directly to them.

There is a charge of $5 for each transcript requested singly, or $5 for the first copy and $1 for each additional copy requested at the same time. There is no charge for intrauniversity copies sent between University offices. Transcript requests are processed in the order received and require five to seven working days for processing. Specific deadlines should be mentioned, and checks accompanying requests should be made payable to Columbia University.

Estimated Expenses

Current educational expenses for a student attending the College during the first academic year are as follows:

Tuition $11,340.00

Health and Hospitalization Insurance Fees 507.00

Books and supplies 730.00

Microscope rental cost and other equipment 570.00

In addition to the educational costs listed above, each first-year student should budget approximately $5,830 to cover housing ($2,670), food ($2,045), clothing, laundry and dry cleaning ($345), and miscellaneous expenses ($770).

There are differences in the length of each academic year, and living and miscellaneous expenses vary. Each year the College Committee on Financial Aid prepares a statement of estimated expenses for students in each year of the medical school curriculum. These statements are given to all financial aid applicants at the time of distribution of the financial aid policy statement.

Microscope, Instruments, and Books

Students are required to have microscopes for courses in the first and second years of medical school. A microscope rental service is operated by the Medical Center Bookstore. For students who wish to purchase a new or used microscope, the faculty recommends a binocular instrument of standard make, complete with carrying case, built-in illuminator, and quadruple nosepiece (4X, lOX, 40X, and lOOX oil-immersion objectives).

Students are required to purchase dissection equipment for the first-year course in gross anatomy and instruments for the diagnostic examination of patients.

The books required or recommended for courses of instruction are announced at the beginning of each academic year.

Housing

Bard Hall, at 50 Haven Avenue overlooking Riverside Park and the Hudson River, is the residence for students in the College. Its facilities include lounges, a cafeteria and several dining rooms, and a gymnasium with a swimming pool, basketball and squash courts, and facilities for other sports.

HOUSING FINANCIAL AID 31

Room rates at Bard Hall depend on the length of the academic year and the room assignment. Information on the cafeteria service, room application forms, and other details are provided for entering students by the Admissions Office. Selected one-bedroom apartments in the Bard Haven Towers are reserved for married students. Other one-, two-, and three- bedroom apartments can be rented by groups of single students.

For further information concerning on- and off-campus housing on or near the Health Sciences Campus, write to the Assistant Director of Residence Halls, Bard Hall Office, 50 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Apartments are available for married students in Bard Haven Tower I on the Medical Center campus. Married or single students may rent apartments in Towers II and III; the rents are higher. Information may be obtained from the Manager, Bard Haven Towers, 100 Haven Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Financial Aid

All financial aid awards are based on demonstrated need. Each year applicants for financial aid are required to borrow a sum of money (unit loan) before becoming eligible for scholarships administered by the College. Financial aid awards are intended to supplement, rather than substitute for, the student's resources and parental contributions.

The federal government makes available each year a limited number of one-year full scholarships for first-year students of Exceptional Financial Need (EFN). Funds are allocated to medical schools, who are responsible for selection of EFN recipients. Students need not request consideration for these funds directly. Awards are determined from the information provided on the financial aid application. Continuation of federal funding for this program is uncertain.

Upon acceptance by the College, students receive the financial aid policy statement, loan interest and repayment information, and an application form which must be completed promptly. Students enrolled in the College are informed annually about the policies for the coming academic year and the dates for submission of the financial aid application and loan applications. Further information may be obtained from the Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, telephone (212) 694-4100.

Spouses of medical students should consult the personnel offices of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and of the Presbyterian Hospital for information regarding employment opportunities at the Medicd Center.

Scholarships

Students are urged to determine the availability of scholarship assistance from the states in which they reside and to make application for such funds when appropriate. As an example, New York State provides funds through the Tuition Assistance Program to residents who meet financial qualifications. In addition. New York State offers the Regents Physician Shortage Scholarship, which is intended to ease the physician shortage in certain areas of the state. The Financial Aid Office provides interested students with the necessary information on applica- tions for these programs. Applicants to medical school should also consult college premedical offices for information on the competitive New York State Regents Scholarships for Professional Study of Medicine. Applications arc due between the October and February prior to matriculation. Students should be advised that these deadlines are strictly adhered to.

Among nongovernmental sources of funding there is the National Medical Fellowships, Inc., which awards fellowships to needy black Americans, American Indians, Mexican-Americans, and mainland Puerto Ricans. Applicants must be citizens of the United States or permanent residents (visa status). Awards are given to first- and second-year medical students. Enrolled medical students should apply to NMF at 250 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 before March 1 for financial assistance for the second year of medical school. Applicants to medical school should request information from NMF.

32 FINANCIAL AID

The R.G. Haddad Foundation Scholarship is available for enrolled medical students who are United States citizens of Syrian or Lebanese descent. Applicants must have verified financial need. A grant for one year may be renewed upon application. The Financial Aid Office of the College of Physicians and Surgeons advises students of the availability of this scholarship annually.

There are a number of scholarship funds administered by the Financial Aid Office of the College. With the exception of the Lawrence John Durante Scholarship (see below), students do not apply directly for these scholarships. The named scholarships listed below have been donated by alumni, foundations, corporations, and friends of the University and are awarded to qualified students by the Financial Aid Office. Students are assured consideration for these funds by applying regularly for financial aid.

Endowed Scholarship Funds

ALLEN Gift of Mrs. Vivian B. Allen.

ALUMNI A limited number of national scholarships. Provided by gifts from the P&S Alumni Association and other contributors.

ANONYMOUS Several; awarded annually.

BANBURY From the Banbury Scholarship Fund.

ALICE IDA AND ABRAHAM PENNER BERNHEIM SCHOLARSHIP FUND For tuition.

ISAAC J. AND RENA HENLY BERNHEIM Given by the family in honor of Isaac J. and Rena Henly Bemheim.

ELSIE J. BIRTWHISTLE Founded by the will of Morell Birtwhistle, in memory of his wife.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, JR. From the George Blumenthal, Jr., Fund.

ELIZABETH ROCK BRACKETT SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Dr. Brackett, the income to be used for scholarship assistance for women medical students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

DR. HARRY BRITENSTOOL MEMORIAL From the estate of Mrs. Blanche B. Ostheimer, in memory of her brother.

LUCIEN AND ETHEL BROWNSTONE MERIT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND A merit scholarship awarded every four years.

DR. MOSES R. BUCHMAN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students, with preference given to those who are residents of Westchester and who plan to practice pediatrics. Established by friends of Dr. Buchman.

DAVID C. BULL MEMORIAL In memory of Dr. David C. Bull, a former member of the Department of Surgery.

RICHARD BUTLER Open to men born in the state of Ohio who are qualified for admission to, and plan to enter, Columbia College, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, or the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ALONZO CLARK Founded by the will of Alonzo Clark, M.D., LL.D., for many years president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1890 Given by a member of the class.

CLASS OF 1899 Given by the class in commemoration of the thirty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

FINANCIAL AID 33

CLASS OF 1912 Given by the class on the fifteenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1913 For medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1920 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1924 To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of their graduation.

CLASS OF 1928 Given at their tenth reunion.

CLASS OF 1932 For a scholarship room. Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1933 For a scholarship.

CLASS OF 1934 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1936 Given by the class on the twenty-fifth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1937 Awarded for tuition of medical students.

CLASS OF 1938 Awarded annually to assist a student in the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

CLASS OF 1939 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1940 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1942 Awarded for medical student scholarships.

CLASS OF 1952 Given by members of the class on the tenth anniversary of its graduation.

CLASS OF 1953 Given by members of the class.

CLASS OF 1964 Established in memory of Dr. Howard Gerstel.

HENRY D. CRUGER Bequest of Helen Cruger, in memory of the Henry D. Cruger family.

CHARLES A. DANA FOUNDATION, Inc. Established by the Foundation.

ANTHONY M. DeANGELIS Open to a student of the fourth-year class. Given by Dr. Anthony M. DeAngelis.

HORACE DENNETT Open to students in the third- and fourth-year classes.

DAVID M. DEVENDORF Preference is given to a candidate from Herkimer County, New York, preferably one from the town of Herkimer. Given by Mrs. David M. Devendorf of Herkimer, New York, in memory of her husband. Dr. David M. Devendorf, Class of 1861.

FRANCIS E. DOUGHTY Given by Miss Phoebe Caroline Swords, in memory of Dr. Francis E. Doughty, Class of 1869.

LAWRENCE JOHN DURANTE Given by members of the Class of 1961, in memory of Lawrence John Durante. Awarded annually to a senior student with verified financial need by the Durante Scholarship Fund Committee after review of the applications of qualified students.

EDWARD PERCY EGLEE Bequest of Edward Percy Eglee, Class of 1913, member of the Faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons from 1919 until his retirement in 1953, when he was a clinical professor of medicine.

JOSEPH HERMAN AND HANNAH EICHNER Established by the will of Benjamin Bernard Eichner, Class of 1919.

JOSEPH C. FOSTER Given by Mrs. Esther J. Foster, in memory of her husband.

34 FINANCIAL AID

VIRGINIA KNEELAND FRANTZ Bequest of Dr. Frantz.

NELLIE ALDEN FRANZ Bequest of Nellie A. Franz to Columbia University for scholarships to worthy young women for undergraduate or graduate study, with preference for those interested in medicine, nursing, sociology, and journalism.

GEORGE AND CHARLIE Given by the Alumni Association of the College, in memory of George Peters and Charles Costello, long-time employees of the Medical Center.

JACOB HARSEN Given by Dr. Jacob Harsen.

FRANK HARTLEY Given by friends and colleagues of Dr. Frank Hartley, class of 1880.

WILLIAM H. HEMINGWAY

AARON HIMMELSTEIN MEMORIAL Open to undergraduate medical students. Given by Dr. Himmelstein's friends and colleagues.

IRMA T. HIRSCHL SCHOLARSHIPS From the estate of Irma T. Hirschl. Awarded on the criteria of financial need, outstanding scholarship and dedication to medical science, the easing of pain and protection of life.

CHARLES EUGENE HUBER, SR. Bequest of Francis D. Huber, in memory of his father.

FRANCIS HUBER Open to a graduate of any institution other than Columbia University, City College, Barnard College, or Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

VIOLA B. HUBER Open to a graduate of Hunter College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ABRAHAM JACOBI For graduates of Columbia University and City College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber, in memory of Dr. Abraham Jacobi.

EDWARD R. JEAL Awarded to deserving students studying under the Faculty of Medicine.

CHARLES CHRISTIAN LIEB Awarded to a student interested in the study of pharmacolo- gy. Given in memory of Dr. Charles Christian Lieb, Hosack Professor of Pharmacology.

LI MING Awarded with preference to students of Chinese birth or descent or nationality. Established by bequest of Mr. Li Ming.

MARJORIE McANENY Open to a graduate of Barnard College. Given by Dr. Francis Huber.

ELIZABETH HALL McCULLOGH Given by Mrs. William G. Heaphy, in memory of her sister. Dr. Elizabeth McCullogh, an alumna of the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

HERBERT D. MANLEY Given as bequest by the late Dr. Herbert D. Manley.

FRANCIS HARTMAN MARKOE Given by Madeline Shelton Markoe, in memory of her husband.

M. MONTGOMERY MAZE From the estate of M. Montgomery Maze, Pearl River, N.Y. Part of this fund may be used for scholarships and/or fellowships, preferably for graduates of the Pearl River High School.

MABEL C. MEAD Awarded to women students of Chinese ancestry. Preference given to those desiring to study medicine.

VIVIAN AND SEYMOUR MILSTEIN ENDOWMENT FOR SCHOLARSHIPS Established by the donors in honor of their friends and physicians, Drs. David Habif and Duane Todd.

SAMUEL J. MORITZ MEMORIAL Given by the executors of the estate of Samuel J. Moritz.

FINANCIAL AID 35

GULLI LINDH MULLER Bequest of the donor to be awarded with preference to a gifted woman student.

P&S SCHOLARSHIP AID AND LOAN FUND Established by the wives of the members of the Faculty of Medicine, faculty, and friends of the College.

RUDOLPH AND MARY E. PFEIFFER Given by Mrs. Mary E. Pfeiffer.

PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL ALUMNI SCHOLARSHIP Granted with preference to sons or daughters of alumni of Presbyterian Hospital. Given by the Society of the Alumni of Presbyterian Hospital.

WILLIAM COLE RAPPLEYE Established at the retirement of Dean Rappleye.

RICHARD RHODEBECK Given by Mrs. Richard Rhodebeck, in memory of her husband.

DAVID H. ROUS From family, friends, and business associates of David H. Rous, the income to be divided equally among the Graduate School of Business, Columbia College, and the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

LOUIS AND RACHAEL RUDIN Established by the Rudin Foundation for students of excellence who would not otherwise be able to complete their education.

SAGAMORE Awarded to needy students.

JOSEPH F. SAPHIR MEMORIAL Given by Elsa M. Saphir, in memory of her husband, Joseph F. Saphir, Class of 1902.

THE MARY S. SAXE SCHOLARSHIP FUND Bequest of Mary S. Saxe.

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Given by faculty members, alumni, and students, in honor of Dr. Severinghaus's services to the College.

BERNARD E. SMITH MEMORIAL Given by Mrs. Gertrude Smith, in memory of her husband.

THE JAMES A. STEVENSON MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP Established by Mrs. Ann Stevenson Hardesty, in memory of her brother James Albert Stevenson, Class of 1943.

EDGAR EGINTON STEWART, Jr., MEMORIAL Given by Dr. E. E. Stewart, in memory of his son.

ARTHUR PURDY STOUT MEMORIAL Given by the Arthur Purdy Stout Society.

ARNOLD STURMDORF Awarded to one or more students in their third or fourth year of medical school. Bequest of Miriam Sturmdorf.

HAROLD S. VAUGHAN Bequest of Dr. Harold Vaughan, Class of 1904.

ANDREA VICALE MEMORIAL Established by Dr. Carmine T. Vicale, in memory of his father.

HERMANN VOLLMER Established in his memory by his wife.

THEODORE L. VOSSELER Preference is given to graduates of Colgate University. Given by Dr. Allison J. Vosseler, Class of 1933, in memory of his father. Dr. Theodore L. Vosseler.

ROBERT M. WECHSLER Given by Dr. 1. S. Wechsler, in memory of his son, Robert M. Wechsler, Class of 1945, and by members of the Class of 1945, in memory of their classmate.

WHITING- Dr. FORDYCE B. St. JOHN SCHOLARSHIP FUND Gift by the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation, in honor of Dr. Fordyce B. St. John.

36 FINANCIAL AID

Dr. JAMES LANCELOT WILSON Awarded to a student selected by the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

JOHN C. WOOD MEMORIAL Established by family and friends in memory of Dr. Wood, Class of 1976.

Gift Funds

VALERIE AND GEORGE DELACORTE FOUNDATION Annual gift.

GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP GIFT FUND Gifts and memorials by various donors.

CHARLES F. IKLE SCHOLARSHIP AND RESEARCH FUND Grant by the New York Community Trust.

JAMES T. LEE FOUNDATION, Inc. Annual grant to medical students.

JULIUS E. STOLFI MEDICAL EDUCATION AND RESEARCH FUND SCHOLARSHIP

THE SULZBERGER FOUNDATION Annual gift. Awarded to senior students with very good academic records, significant financial need, and plans to pursue careers in family medicine or general internal medicine in nonurban areas.

Loans

Loans are available to all full-time medical students. These funds are provided by various sources, including the federal and state governments, the University, and also private agencies, as outlined below.

Foreign students who hold an F-1 student visa are eligible to borrow only from University funds and must have comakers who are citizens or permanent residents of the United States. Comakers should not be University employees. Foreign students may borrow from federal or state loan funds upon being granted permanent resident visa status in the United States.

Health Professions Student Loans. These are allocated by the Bureau of Health Manpower of the National Institutes of Health to individual medical schools, which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be loaned. Assuming the availability of adequate funding, the maximum loan to a student in an academic year is the cost of tuition plus $2,500. Loans are repayable to the school over a ten-year period beginning one year after completing or interrupting the prescribed full-time course of study. Interest at the annual rate of 9 percent begins to accrue when the loan becomes repayable.

Repayment of Health Professions Loans may be deferred up to three years for those who become members of a uniformed federal service on sustained full-time duty (i.e., the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Coast and Geodetic Survey), the Public Health Service, or the Peace Corps. For those pursuing advanced professional training, repayment may be deferred to completion of the training program. Interest does not accrue during period of deferment.

Health Professions Loans are forgiven or cancelled under certain conditions: (1) In the instance of students who agree to practice medicine for at least two years in a region of a state that has been determined to need additional personnel, the federal government will repay 60 percent of the outstanding principal and interest on any educational loan(s) for the cost of professional education. For a third year of practice in such an area, an additional 25 percent of the loan(s) will be repaid. (2) The outstanding loans of students who fail to complete their health professions studies will be repaid if they are in exceptionally needy circumstances, from a low-income or disadvantaged family, and cannot be expected to resume studies within two years. (3) Loans of students who die or suffer permanent and total disability will be cancelled.

FINANCIAL AID 37

Repayment of loans for service in shortage areas is subject to annual allocation of funds from the federal government.

National Direct Student Loans. Funds are allocated by the Office of Education to schools which are responsible for determining both the recipients of such funds and the amounts to be awarded. The total (undergraduate and graduate school loans) available to a student from the NDSL program is $12,000. The current interest rate, payable during the repayment period, is 5 percent on the unpaid principal. Repayment begins six months after graduation or after leaving school. The repayment period may extend up to ten years. Repayment may be deferred for up to three years during active U.S. military service, during service in the Peace Corps or Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), during service in the National Health Service Corps, or for up to two years during service in an internship required to begin professional practice.

Federal and State Guaranteed Loans. Under the auspices of the Bureau of Student Financial Assistance of the Department of Education, federally insured loans are available to students with demonstrated financial need. The loans are made by authorized banks, savings-and-loan associations, credit unions, pension funds, and insurance companies. The maximum loan each academic year under this program is $5,000, and the total outstanding loan balance at any one time may not exceed $25,000. Lending institutions participating in this program can provide information regarding interest rates, repayment, and deferment of repayment.

Auxiliary Loan to Assist Students. ALAS is a new federally insured loan program available to graduate students, who may borrow up to $3,000 a year at 12 or 14 percent interest. Repayment of the principal is deferred while students are in school full time, but interest payments must be made while enrolled. Since authorized deferments are the same as those for the guaranteed student loan program, a student may continue to pay interest only during the first two years of residency, beginning repayment of both principal and interest following that period. The aggregate indebtedness for graduate students is $15,000 under this program. This loan must be taken at the same bank as the GSL if a student borrows a GSL in New York State. This rule may also apply in other states. Students who are not New York State residents should be able to make an ALAS loan at a bank in New York if they are unable to borrow from their local lender.

Health Education Assistance Loans. HEAL is a federally insured loan program available to students in the health professions. Currently, all HEAL lenders use a promissory note with a variable interest rate. The rate is reassessed quarterly and is calculated by taking the interest rate on the ninety-one day Treasury Bill plus an additional 3y2 percent. Interest on this loan begins to accrue immediately. There is a nine-month grace period after graduation. However, if the borrower becomes an intern or resident in an accredited program before that date, repayment will begin from nine to twelve months after the borrower ceases to be an intern or resident.

P&S Dean 's Loan. The Dean's loan fund is a program established by the College to offset the burden of high interest loans to students with a high degree of demonstrated financial need. The interest rate is 9 percent and does not accrue while the student is in school or postgraduate training.

University loan funds are also intended to supplement students' resources when monies are available. Included among these are the following funds:

PETER AMAZON Bequest of Peter Amazon.

LEONARD ALEXANDER ARMS Bequest of Lydia B. Arms, in memory of her husband, to create a revolving loan fund for scholarship and research to medical students and graduate students at P&S.

GEORGE BLUMENTHAL, JR. Used for the assistance of needy students in the medical school.

38 FINANCIAL AID

CLASS OF 1906 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1906.

CLASS OF 1919 Gifts from various members of the Class of 1919. To be used for loans to deserving students.

CAROL ELISSA GARDNER Established by Dr. M. Jordan Thorstad, in memory of his wife, Dr. Carol Elissa Gardner Thorstad, Class of 1941.

DAVID GREENE A bequest from the estate of Fannye Greene Meyerson, in honor of her brother. Dr. David Greene. Used for assistance of needy students in the medical school and Columbia College.

GEORGE L. HAWKINS, Jr. Gift of George L. Hawkins, Jr., Class of 1941.

B. H. HOMAN, JR., REVOLVING LOAN FUND Long-term, low-interest loans for needy students.

ROBERT ABBE MACKENZIE Established by friends, colleagues, and patients of Dr. MacKenzie, an alumnus of the Class of 1921.

GEORGE W. MERCK MEMORIAL Established by the Merck Company Foundation in honor of George W. Merck. For graduates of P&S, wherever they are in training, or to graduates of other medical schools in training at hospitcds affiliated with the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

JESSIE SMITH NOYES

AURA E. SEVERINGHAUS Established by the Clark Foundation as an unrestricted, discretionary fund to be used primarily for the support of students and student activities. Priority given to fourth-year students who are subjected to increased living and transportation costs because of electing clerkships at the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, N.Y.

WALTER C. AND MARJORIE C. STEIN Bequest of Marjorie C. Stein.

STEINHARDT MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP Bequest of Samuel C. Steinhardt. Awarded to graduates of one of the colleges of the City University of New York who have attended public schools exclusively (except for religious instruction). To be repaid in fifteen years; without interest for the first ten years; with 5 percent annual interest thereafter on the unpaid balance.

In addition to the foregoing, periodically there are funds for short-term emergency loans, which are administered through the Financial Aid Office of the medical school.

Prizes

Dr. HARRY S. ALTMAN PRIZE Awarded to an outstanding senior student who demon- strates a special interest in pediatric ambulatory care. Established to honor Dr. Harry S. Altman, in recognition of his outstanding contributions to scholarship in pediatrics.

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AWARD Given for outstanding achievement.

VIRGINIA P. APGAR AWARD Awarded to an outstanding graduate student for excellence in completing an advanced course in anesthesiology and intensive care. Established by the Department of Anesthesiology in honor of Virginia P. Apgar.

MICHAEL H. ARANOW AWARD Awarded to the student who exemplifies the caring and humane qualities of the practicing physician.

HERBERT J. BARTELSTONE AWARD IN PHARMACOLOGY Awarded to a member of the graduating class of the College who has demonstrated exceptional accomplishments in

FINANCIAL AID 39

pharmacology. Established to honor the memory of Professor Herbert J. Bartelstone, member of the Department of Pharmacology from 1950 until 1973, dedicated and inspiring teacher, and uncompromising advocate of the importance of rigorous preparation in basic medical science in the education of the physician.

COAKLEY MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Otolaryngology to a senior student who has done outstanding work in the field.

TITUS MUNSON COAN PRIZE Awarded to the senior student who has submitted the best essay in biological science or otherwise best contributed to its advancement. Bequest of Titus M. Coan.

THOMAS F. COCK, M.D., PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for excellence in obstetrics and gynecology.

FREDERICK PARKER GAY MEMORIAL AWARD Awarded to the senior student whose work in microbiology is judged the most outstanding. Given by Mrs. Frederick Parker Gay, in memory of her husband.

JANEWAY PRIZE Awarded to the student graduating from the College with the highest marks for efficiency and ability. Given by the bequest of Matilda S. J. Wisner.

Dr. HAROLD LAMPORT BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH PRIZE Awarded to a senior student for the best thesis reporting original biomedical research. Gift of the Lamport Foundation.

JOHN K. LATTIMER PRIZE IN UROLOGY Awarded to senior students for the best essays on urological subjects.

ROBERT F. LOEB AWARD Awarded to a senior student who, in the opinion of the Department of Medicine, has shown the greatest promise of excellence in clinical medicine. Established in memory of Dr. Robert F. Loeb, Bard Professor of Medicine, and chairman of the Department of Medicine from 1947 to 1959.

F. PHILIP LOWENFISH PRIZE IN DERMATOLOGY Awarded to the individual who has done the most creative and original research in dermatology. Given by Mrs. Lowenfish, in her husband's memory.

ADMIRAL DAVID WILLARD LYON AWARD Awarded to a senior student on a military scholarship for outstanding academic achievement. Established by Dr. Edgar Housepian and Mrs. David Willard Lyon in memory of Admiral Lyon.

DOCTOR CECIL G. MARQUEZ BALSO STUDENT AWARD FOR EXCEL- LENCE Awarded to a graduating minority medical student for his/her outstanding contribu- tion to the Black and Latin Student Organization and the minority communities.

EDITH AND DENTON McKANE MEMORIAL AWARD Bequest of Edith U. McKane. Awarded to a senior student for excellence in basic or clinical research in ophthalmology.

Dr. HAROLD LEE MEIERHOF MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded on recommendation of the professor of pathology to the student who has done the best work in the field during the four years of medical school. Given by the parents of Dr. Harold Lee Meierhof, Class of 1917.

NEW YORK ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL AWARD An annual prize awarded to a senior student upon nomination by the Department of Orthopedic Surgery, for outstanding perfor- mance in the field.

JOSEPH GARRISON PARKER AWARD Awarded to the senior in the College who best exemplifies, through a continued personal interest and activities in art, music, literature, or the public interest, the fact that Living and Learning go on together. Given by Dr. and Mrs. Philip Parker, in memory of their son, Joseph, Class of 1948, whose promising career in medicine was cut short by death in 1953, but in whose life the love of music and the arts was a constant source of inspiration.

40 FINANCIAL AID STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES

P&S CLASS OF 1924, Dr. ALLEN O. WHIPPLE MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded to a senior student, upon nomination of the Department of Surgery, for outstanding performance in the field.

DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY PRIZE Awarded by the Department of Psychiatry to a second-year student for the best work in psychopathology.

PUBLIC HEALTH AMBULATORY CARE AWARD Awarded by the School of Public Health to a senior student for an excellent public health project.

SAMUEL W. ROVER AND LEWIS ROVER AWARD An annual prize to be awarded to a graduating medical student or a male graduate student for scholarship and outstanding achievement in biochemistry at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

ANN RYAN PRIZE IN BIOCHEMISTRY To be awarded to deserving women graduate students.

HELEN M. SCIARRA PRIZE Awarded to a senior student in the College for outstanding work in neurology.

Dr. ALFRED STEINER AWARD Presented annually to one or more students chosen by a faculty committee on the basis of achievement in medical research. Funded by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich in honor of Dr. Steiner.

Dr. HAROLD B. STEVELMAN AWARD Awarded to a senior student for excellence in adult cardiology. In honor of Dr. Harold Stevelman, Class of 1958, in appreciation of his service to the family of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gilbert.

Dr. WILLIAM PERRY WATSON PRIZE IN PEDIATRICS Awarded on the nomination of the professor of pediatrics to that member of the graduating class of the College who has shown the most notable work in the study of the diseases of infants and children.

Dr. WILLIAM RAYNER WATSON AWARD Awarded to that member of the graduating class who has done the most outstanding work in psychiatry during the four years of attendance at the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

SIGMUND L. WILENS PRIZE Awarded to a member of the graduating class who, in the opinion of the Department of Pathology, has been distinguished by special excellence in pathology. Gift of Dr. Marie Renate Dische Wilens, in memory of her husband. Dr. Sigmund L. Wilens.

Student and Alumni Activities

All students enrolled in the College enjoy the privileges and facilities of the University campus, including the University libraries.

P&S Club

The P&S Club was founded over eighty years ago by John R. Mott, who later won the Nobel Peace Prize. The Club is the most active and comprehensive student organization in American medical education today. All matriculated students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are members, eligible to participate in extracurricular activities of their choice. Under the guidance of the Faculty Advisory Board, the student cabinet, led by the president, assumes the entire responsibility for management of the Club. The cabinet consists of four elected members from each class and those who chair the following committees: Orientation, Handbook, Student-Faculty Home Visits, Films, Concerts, Choral Society, Bard Hall Players, Fine Arts, Athletics, Community Youth Work, Accessories, Social, and Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Society.

STUDENT AND ALUMNI ACTIVITIES 41

Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society

A chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha, the national honor medical society, was founded at the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1907. Students are elected to membership in the senior year by a committee of the faculty appointed by the Dean. The committee is chaired by the Alpha Omega Alpha Councilor of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Student member- ship is determined according to the constitution of the national society. Election is limited to those whose scholastic qualifications place them in the upper 25 percent of the class. The number of student members elected from any class may not exceed one-sixth of the number expected to graduate in that class. Although scholastic excellence is required for membership, integrity, capacity for leadership, compassion, and fairness in dealing with one's colleagues are judged to be of equal significance.

P&S Alumni Association

The P&S Alumni Relations Office serves to foster and maintain cordial relationships between the College of Physicians and Surgeons and its alumni and is responsible for alumni relations programs and the Alumni Annual Fund. Liaison with the College is facilitated through the office of the Assistant Dean for Alumni Affairs.

Regular members of the Alumni Association include all those awarded the M.D. or Med.Sc.D. degrees from the College, as well as all Ph.D. graduates of the basic sciences curricula at P&S and those awarded the Certificate in Psychoanalytic Medicine. Associate members include faculty members of the College, all house staff members and visiting fellows at hospitals affiliated with P&S.

The work of the Alumni Association is accomplished through the efforts of its officers and members of the fifteen standing and ad hoc committees, all of whom form the constituency of the P&S Alumni Council. Among the important functions of the Association is participation in the publication of P&S, a magazine that is cosponsored by the alumni and the medical school and serves as a major form of communication between the school and its alumni, faculty, students and their parents, and other friends and associates of the College.

Restricted revenues raised by the Alumni Association provide funds for endowed scholar- ships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and toward the endowment of a P&S Alumni Professorship. Unrestricted revenues allow the College flexibility in applying funds to areas of greatest need. Traditionally, a substantial stipend from unrestricted revenues goes to the P&S Club as well as to scholarship aid.

As future alumni, students play an important role in the work and deliberations of the Alumni Association. Through their membership on the Student-Alumni Relations Committee, students and alumni work together in addressing students' needs and concerns.

Information about the Alumni Association and its activities is available from the P&S Alumni Relations Office, 2005-C Black Building, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032. Telephone (212) 694-3498.

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The Program of Instruction

The first-year curriculum is largely devoted to basic science courses with correlation clinics to demonstrate the application of scientific information to the practice of medicine. The first-year student also studies the impact of health care systems in our current society on the individual patient and physiciem. Second-year courses concentrate on the clinical relevance of basic science concepts as the bridging process to clinical instruction begins. Correlations between pathology and pathophysiology are emphasized. The development of basic clinical skills begins in the second semester and culminates in a four-week clerkship. Throughout both preclinical years elective opportunities are available for pursuit of areas of interest.

The major clinical year is devoted exclusively to rotations on clerkships in the clinical disciplines. Under close supervision the students are helped to develop the skills and knowledge required for the practice of clinical medicine. Students learn to elicit a comprehen- sive history and to carry out a complete physical examination. They learn to develop professional relationships with patients, and they acquire an understanding of the mechanisms of disease and of the principles necessary for valid diagnostic appraisal and effective therapeutic plans.

All courses of the first three years of the curriculum are required of all students. In the fourth year, with the guidance of faculty advisers, students design individual elective curricula, drawn from a wide range of basic scientific electives, clinical electives, and research programs offered by the faculty. Each fourth-year student is required to take a one-month elective in ambulatory care which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. The elective courses of all departments are described in a catalog which is printed annually and distributed to students and faculty. Students are permitted to spend three months of the curriculum in elective programs offered by other medical schools. In addition, the School of Public Health offers international medicine programs that provide opportunities to study the organization and delivery of health services in many countries of the world.

During the elective curriculum students have available the resources of the entire University. Students are encouraged to utilize elective curriculum time to reach career decisions. Faculty advisers stress the acquisition of knowledge and skills in areas of medicine apart from the student's career discipline, and they encourage students to gain experience in clinical and/or laboratory research.

The College reserves the right to make changes in the program of studies and courses of instruction at any time.

Grades, Promotions, and Leaves of Absence

All courses are rated on an Honors-Pass-Fail system and these ratings only are recorded on the official transcripts. Students are not ranked within the class. Faculty provide narrative descriptions of student performances in preclinical courses (Abnormal Human Biology, Introduction to the Patient, and Psychiatric Medicine I and II), major clinical year clerkships, and elective programs. These evaluations become part of the student's permanent academic record in the Office of the Dean.

There are three standing faculty committees concerned with students' academic perfor- mances. These committees are: the First Year Class Faculty, the Second Year Class Faculty, and the Clinical Committee. The latter deals with academic performances in the major clinical year and the elective curriculum. The standing committees meet during each academic year to review student performances and to make decisions related to course failures and to promotions. Course failures in all years of the curriculum must be corrected according to the directives of the faculty committees. A student may be advanced to the next academic year of the medical school curriculum only upon recommendation of the faculty committee. In any year of the curriculum students may be dismissed for poor scholarship. Repetition of a year of the

44 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

curriculum may be recommended by a faculty committee. The faculty committees may direct students whose performances are marginal to undertake additional work to correct deficiencies and strengthen overall performance in any discipline.

Students are informed in writing of the academic decisions of all faculty committees. Students have the right to appeal decisions of the faculty committees. A student who wishes to appeal may request the concerned committee to reverse or alter a decision. If the committee reaffirms the original decision, the student may direct an appeal to the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, who may refer the appeal to the Executive Committee of the Faculty Council for final decision.

The Faculty of Medicine reserves the right to dismiss, or to deny admission, registration, readmission, or graduation to any student who in the judgment of the Faculty of Medicine is determined to be unsuited for the study or practice of medicine.

Students in the College of Physicians and Surgeons are required to pass National Board Examinations Parts 1 and II prior to graduation.

Leaves of absence may be granted by the Dean for a limited period of time in exceptional circumstances only for health reasons or personal emergencies.

Key to Course Numbers

Medical Center courses: The suffixes F and S refer to first- and second-year courses, respectively. Numbers without a suffix indicate major clinical year clerkships that are repeated throughout the year in instruction periods of twelve weeks or less.

Summary of Curriculum (for Students Entering in September 1983)

First Year

SEPTEMBER 1, 1983, to JANUARY 11, 1984. First semester. JANUARY 16, 1984, to JUNE 8, 1984. Second semester.

Second Year

SEPTEMBER 1, 1984, through MAY 31, 1985.

Third and Fourth Years

JULY 1, 1985, through APRIL 30, 1987.

Basic Science and Introductory Clinical Courses of the First and Second Years

Abnormal Human Biology lOlS.

Dr. Canfield and interdepartmental associates: Cardiology, Dr. Drusin; Pulmonary, Dr. Harvey; Endocrinology-Metabolism, Dr. Holub; Gastroenterology, Dr. Glick- man; Hematology, Dr. Bank; Immunology, Dr. Butler; Infectious Diseases, Dr. Neu; Oncology, Dr. Ellison; Nephrology, Dr. Al-Awqati; Surgery, Dr. Lo Gerfo. Exercises in the application and correlation of the basic sciences to a broad range of clinical problems. Teaching is by seminar/lecture and is closely integrated with courses in pathology, pharmacology, and introductory medicine.

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 45

Anatomy lOlF. Microscopic anatomy Dr. Nunez and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies of structure in relation to function.

Anatomy 102F. Human anatomy

Drs. April, Moss, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory encompassing basic morphological and functional human anato- my.

Anatomy 103F. Developmental anatomy Dr. Pfenninger and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and laboratory emphasizing the fundamental processes of embryogenesis; closely integrated with Anatomy 101 F Microscopic anatomy.

Biochemistry lOlF. Introductory biochemistry Dr. P. R. Srinivasan and departmental staff.

Lectures and conferences stressing principles of biochemistry and their relationship to disease processes.

Genetics lOlS. Medical genetics Dr. William Johnson and associates.

Lectures and clinical presentations emphasizing the practice of clinical genetics and the application of principles of genetics to the medical specialties.

Medicine lOlS. Introduction to the practice of medicine Drs. Canfield, Marcus, and associates.

Lectures, conferences, and seminars addressing ethical and personal issues relevant to the practice of medicine.

Medicine 102S. Introduction to the patient Dr. Morris and associates.

A series of interdepartmental presentations and demonstrations followed by an intensive four-week preceptorship (at Harlem, Overlook, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital) during which the student learns to take a comprehensive medical history and to perform a complete physical examination.

Microbiology lOlF. General microbiology

Drs. Ginsberg, Silverstein, and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory covering the basic principles of cell regulation, immunology, virology, and the biology of pathogenic organisms.

Anatomy-Physiology 106S. Neural science

Drs. Castellucci, Kandel, Kelly, Kupfermann, Rowland, and Schwartz.

Lectures, seminars, laboratories, and clinical demonstrations to provide an integrated understanding of neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, biochemistry, and behavior.

Nutrition lOlF. Introduction to nutrition Dr. Winick and associates.

Lectures that define the elements of nutrition essential for good health.

Pathology lOlF. General pathology Dr. Leftkowitch and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory emphasizing the mechanisms of injury and repair in cells, tissues, and organ systems.

Pathology 102S. Systemic pathology Dr. J. Fenoglio and departmental staff.

Lectures, conferences, and laboratory exercises including light and electron microscopic studies to elucidate the pathogenesis of findings in disease.

Pathology 103S. Neuropathology Dr. Duffy and associates.

Lectures, demonstrations, and microscopic studies of diseases of the nervous system.

46 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Pharmacology lOlS. General and special pharmacology Dr. Kahn and departmental staff.

Lectures, seminars, and demonstrations to elucidate the basic principles essential for the effective use of drugs as therapeutic or diagnostic agents.

Medicine 105F. Physician-patient relationship Dr. Park and associates.

Preceptor sessions emphasizing the central role of the physician-patient relationship in the practice of medicine and the importance of the effects of health care organization and other factors on that relationship.

Physiology 101 F. Human physiology Dr. Nocenti and departmental staff.

Lectures, demonstrations, and conferences to define the function of specific cells, tissues, and organs and their homeostatic mechanisms.

Psychiatry lOlF. Psychiatric medicine, I Dr. Arkow and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars presenting the salient features of normal development.

Psychiatry 102S. Psychiatric medicine, II Dr. Arkow and departmental staff.

Lectures and seminars covering the major mental illnesses and the elements of patient interviewing.

Public Health 101 F. Structure of health care systems Dr. Rosenberg and associates.

Lectures and seminar groups on the current organization of health care.

Public Health 102F. Epidemiology Dr. Paneth and associates.

Lectures and seminars to present epidemiologicd principles.

Public Health 103F. Biostatistics Dr. Fleiss and associates.

Lectures on the basic elements of biostatistics applicable to medicine.

Public Health 104S. Parasitic diseases Dr. Despommier and associates.

Lectures and laboratories stressing parasitic diseases likely to be encountered and the techniques necessary for the diagnosis of these diseases.

Major Clinical Year

Anesthesiology 201. Clinical clerkship in anesthesiology Dr. Bendixen and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship that provides training in preanesthetic evaluation, management, and postanesthetic care of surgical patients. At the conclusion of the clerkship students should be able to do the following: (1) describe the major factors to be considered in selecting anesthetic drugs and techniques for patients undergoing common surgical procedures; (2) describe indications for positive pressure ventilation of the lungs and how the adequacy of such ventilation can be determined; (3) differentiate between a patent and obstructed airway in a patient and demonstrate on a patient or mannikin his/her ability to obtain a patent airway by positioning; (4) describe the indications for use of an endotracheal tube; (5) describe procedures used for resuscitation of a patient who has had cardiac arrest and demonstrate on a mannikin his/her ability to perform mouth-to-mouth ventilation and closed chest cardiac massage; (6) describe indications for and contraindications to the use of local anesthetics to provide infiltration and nerve block anesthesia; and (7) describe the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of local anesthetic drug toxicity.

Dermatology 201. Dr. Harber and staff.

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 47

Medicine 201. Clinical clerkship in medicine

Dr. Garvey and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's

Hospitals.

Extended clinical experience under a preceptorship system at Presbyterian Hospital and at another affiliated hospital, Harlem, Roosevelt, or St. Luke's Hospital. At the conclusion of the clerkship the student should be capable of taking a precise medical history, performing an accurate physical examination, interpreting basic laboratory data, formulating a cogent problem list, and communicating these data in accurate verbal and written form. These skills will be acquired in the patient care setting in order to increase the student's understanding of the physiologic, psychologic, and social aspects of medicine and to prepare the student for the assumption of clinical responsibility under close supervision.

Neurology 201. Clinical clerkship in neurology

Dr. Rowland and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

A comprehensive experience in clinical neurology provided at the bedside at the Neurological Institute. Under close supervision of a junior and senior resident and an attending physician in neurology, students learn to obtain a systematic neurological history and to perform and interpret the neurological examination. By active participation in the evaluation and care of patients, expertise is obtained in the diagnosis and treatment of common neurologiceil diseases. Students learn how to do a lumbar puncture and they become familiar with electrodiagnostic and neuroradiological tests. Experience is also obtained in neurosurgery and rehabilitation medicine. Management of neurological emergencies is learned during night call with the senior resident. In addition, a comprehensive core knowledge of clinical neurology is ensured by a course syllabus, daily rounds, and preceptor sessions with the attending physician.

Neurology 202. Neurosurgery

Dr. Stein and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Obstetrics and Gynecology 201. Clinical clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology Dr. Rosenfeld and staff at the Harlem, Presbyterian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in obstetrics and gynecology under close supervision of house staff and attendings. On the gynecological wards and in the clinics the student learns to take a sexual and gynecological history, to examine the breasts, abdomen, and pelvis, to distinguish normal and abnormal findings relative to gynecological disease, and to diagnose and manage benign and malignant gynecologic tumors. The student acquires the skills needed to approach problems of sexuality and an understanding of the impact of changing physiological states in menarche and menopause. On the obstetrical service the student learns the medical and surgical complications encountered during pregnancy and delivery, and the student learns to diagnose and manage pregnancy. The student participates in the conduct of labor, the delivery, and the care of the newborn.

Ophthalmology 201. Clinical clerkship in ophthalmology Dr. Campbell and staff.

Orthopedic Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in orthopedic surgery Dr. Dick and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

On the orthopedic surgery clerkship students learn to perform an orthopedic physical examination and to take an orthopedic history from a patient. The clerkship provides students with insight into the more common musculoskeletal problems (including fractures and trauma) and the basic approaches to management of these problems by an orthopedic surgeon. The student is expected to gain insight into how the discipline of orthopedic surgery works in conjunction with other specialties and how an orthopedic service provides in-patient and out-patient care.

Otolaryngology 201. Clinical clerkship in otolaryngology Dr. Abramson and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A clerkship designed to teach the skills of physical examination of the ear, nose, and throat and to provide an understanding of certain diseases where this examination is crucial in diagnosis and management. The clerkship includes selected didactic lectures, followed by a preceptor-type experience in the clinic where students examine and work up a number of patients under the direct supervision of a faculty member.

48 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

Pediatrics 201. Clinical clerkship in pediatrics

Dr. Katz and staff at the Babies Hospital (Presbyterian), Harlem, Roosevelt, and

St. Luke's Hospitals.

A clinical clerkship providing both in-patient and ambulatory care experience. The student is introduced to the study of infants and children: growth and development, diseases, and health care maintenance. The student develops basic skills in the following areas: taking the pediatric history from the parents and from the older child; performing the physical examination of the pediatric patient, including the young infant; observing, analyzing, and recording the interaction between parent and child; and ordering and interpreting laboratory tests. The student learns to integrate the data acquired and formulate an appropriate problem list and plan for the patient. The student also learns to make the basic measurements of physical, neurological, and psychosocial growth and development, and to plot and assess the data.

Psychiatry 201. Clinical clerkship in psychiatry

Dr. Malitz and staff at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Harlem, Presbyte- rian, Roosevelt, and St. Luke's Hospitals.

A comprehensive clerkship in psychiatry. In active participation in patient care under faculty supervision the student is expected to learn to conduct a psychiatric history and mental status examination and to develop refined interviewing skills, noting verbal and nonverbal behavior. The student learns to make a psychiatric differential diagnosis, to use psychotropic drugs effectively, to evaluate suicide potential, and to develop and enhance therapeutic rapport. The clerkship aims to provide an appreciation of the effects of psychological, social, and biological phenomena on illness-related behaviors.

Radiology 201. Diagnostic radiology (medical) Dr. Baker and staff.

Radiology 202. Diagnostic radiology (surgical) Dr. Baker and staff.

Rehabilitation Medicine 201.

Dr. Downey and staff at the Neurological Institute of the Presbyterian Hospital.

Included in Neurology 201.

Surgery 201. Clinical clerkship in surgery

Dr. Reemstma and staff at the Presbyterian Hospital.

A comprehensive clinical clerkship during which the student is expected to demonstrate improvement in ability to perform histories and physical examinations on surgical patients and to formulate rational diagnostic and therapeutic plans. The student is expected to demonstrate increasing skill and competence in performing selected procedures, in assuming supervised responsibility for patient care, in communicat- ing succinctly and with clarity to patients and colleagues, and in building a functional body of critically examined information regarding common surgical entities.

Surgery 202. Lectures and demonstrations in surgical pathology Dr. Reemstma and staff; Dr. Perzin and staff.

As part of the surgical clinical clerkship {Surgery 201 ), these three one-and-a-half hour sessions per week describe various selected problems in surgical pathology. The didactic lectures are presented by the surgical "academic senior resident" (PGY5). This resident presents the clinical aspects of various surgical diseases and is assisted by a surgical pathology senior resident, who demonstrates gross specimens and microscopic slides appropriate to the topics and patients being discussed.

Urology 201. Clinical clerkship in urology Dr. Olsson and staff.

During the clinical clerkship in urology students learn to identify common disorders of the gcnito-urinary tract through precise patient interviews and examinations. Both ambulatory and in-patients are evaluated. By knowing diagnostic methods unique to urology, students are able to formulate appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic plans.

Fourth Year

Interdepartment 301. Ambulatory care /public health selective Dr. C. Ortiz-Neu, course coordinator.

Each student in the fourth year is required to select an elective in ambulatory care, which includes clerkship experience in Public Health/Community Medicine. (For the rest of the Fourth Year see page 43 and the elective catalogue.)

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 49

Special Programs

M.D.-Ph.D. Program

This is a cooperative program sponsored by the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and the College of Physicians and Surgeons for students who have had a strong undergraduate program in science and have a strong commitment to biomedical research. The program allows students to work toward the Ph.D. degree in one of the disciplines listed below in addition to earning the M.D. degree.

Students who wish to participate in the program must be admitted to the College of Physicians and Surgeons and to the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Separate applications must be made to the College of Physicians and Surgeons and to the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Students complete the basic science requirements of the medical program and enter a participating department of the Graduate School to carry out the Ph.D. program. They then complete the balance of the requirements for the M.D. degree.

The participating Ph.D. programs are:

Anatomy and Cell Biology Microbiology

Biochemistry Nutrition

Biological Sciences Pathology

Chemistry Pharmacology

Epidemiology Physiology

Human Genetics and Development Psychology Mathematical Statistics

For additional information students should write to Dr. David Schachter, Chairman, Graduate Biomedical Sciences Advisory Committee, Department of Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

To apply, students should request an application from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and an application from the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Joint M.D./M.P.H. Program

This dual degree program is under the joint direction of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the School of Public Health. In addition to preclinical and clinical medical training, students gain substantive knowledge of the health care delivery system and the technological, social, and political forces that contribute to the problems and patterns of illness, medical care, and delivery of services. They also develop concrete skills of research or administration applicable in interdisciplinary health service settings, both clinical and community based.

Before being considered for admission to the joint degree program, the applicant must first be accepted as a degree candidate in the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Formal application to the School of Public Health may then be made at any time before the student enters the fourth year of medical training. The overall length of the joint program, registration, and scheduling patterns differ for individual students. The total elapsed time could be as short as four years, but might extend beyond the four-year graduation date of the medical school. In general, during the first three years the joint degree student uses vacation and free time in the medical schedule to cross-register for public health courses. In the fourth year the student registers concurrently in the two schools, permitting opportunities to complete core, track, and elective public health courses and also carry the required clinical elective work in the medical curriculum. The M.D. and the M.P.H. degrees may be awarded simultaneously at the end of the fourth year; either degree may be awarded separately when the requirements have been met.

For further information, consult the Dean's Office in the College of Physicians and Surgeons,

50 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y., 10032, or the Dean's Office in the School of Public Health, 600 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy

Educational programs are offered by the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine to students who have already earned a bachelor's degree. They may apply for admission to a two-year program leading to the Master of Science degree in physical therapy or occupational therapy, or a second professional Master of Science degree in occupational therapy education or occupational therapy administration. Details are given in the bulletin of Programs in Physical Therapy and Occupational Therapy.

Program of the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research

A course of training in the theory and practice of psychoanalytic medicine is offered through the Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research of the Department of Psychiatry. The program, a minimum of four years in length, leads to the award of a certificate in Psychoanalysis. For details, see the bulletin of the Center (formerly the Psychoanalytic Clinic).

Programs in Nutrition

The Master of Science program, administered by the Postgraduate Division of the Faculty of Medicine, is a twelve-month program that serves as a foundation for students who plan to continue for the Doctor of Philosophy degree or to attend a professional school in the health sciences. In addition, the master's program is offered to physicians and other health specialists who wish to augment their training with a knowledge of nutrition.

Requirements for admission: a bachelor's degree from an accredited college, with a strong emphasis on the sciences, including two years of chemistry, one year of biology, and a course in elementary biochemistry. The Graduate Record Examination is required.

Under the jurisdiction of the Executive Committee on Graduate Instruction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, students may follow a program of studies leading to the Ph.D. degree. Course work and thesis research in nutritional biochemistry and in clinical and public health nutrition are carried out under the guidance of the Doctoral Program Subcommittee on Nutrition.

Requirements for admission: successful completion of the Master of Science degree program as outlined above, or the equivalent, and demonstrated scholarly ability in pursuing advanced studies and research. In addition, students must fulfill the general requirements for the degree which govern all Ph.D. candidates in the University.

A program of postdoctoral training in nutrition is offered for qualified individuals having the degree of Doctor of Medicine or the degree of Doctor of Philosophy who intend to pursue careers in teaching and research in nutrition. The program includes clinics, selected nutrition courses, seminars, and participation in research projects, with a view to qualifying the individual for teaching in medical schools or in nutrition departments of graduate schools. Specific training is given in the areas of nutrition and development, prenatal growth, obesity, endocrinology, and nutrition and metabolism. This program has considerable flexibility and is arranged with the individual to suit his or her particular goals and needs.

Inquiries concerning the above programs may be directed to the Office of the Director, Institute of Human Nutrition, 701 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION 51

Program in Clinical Genetics

While patient services in genetics are rendered through the existing clinical departments of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, the teaching, research, and clinical services in genetics are coordinated and integrated by the Program in Clinical Genetics, under the chairmanship of Dr. Arthur Bloom, Professor of Pediatrics and of Human Genetics and Development. The membership of this committee includes physicians and scientists from the Department of Human Genetics and Development and from numerous other departments of the College.

The Program in Clinical Genetics offers fellowships in genetics and training in the genetic aspects of a wide range of medical and surgical specialties. The Program provides postgrad- uate clinical teaching, elective courses for medical students, and regular conferences on clinical genetics. The clinical and laboratory facilities of the Presbyterian Hospital, Babies Hospital, and other affiliated hospitals are all utilized in the Program, and the research laboratories of the Department of Human Genetics and Development actively participate in it.

Interested applicants should write for further information to the Chairman, Program in Clinical Genetics, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 630 West 168th Street, New York, N.Y. 10032.

Program in Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry

The program of study in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, which leads to the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, is under the jurisdiction of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Information about admission and degree requirements and courses of instruction is given in the bulletin of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Endowed Lectureships and Visiting Professorship

Through the kindness of generous donors, the resources of the Faculty of Medicine include several distinguished lectureships and a visiting professorship:

The Cartwright Lecture Fund, established under the will of Benjamin Cartwright, made possible biennial lectures under the sponsorship of the P&S Alumni Association during the period 1881-1912. A new series of Cartwright Lectures was inaugurated under the College's auspices in November 1974.

The Alexander Ming Fisher Lectures were established under the terms of the will of Dr. A. M. Fisher's half-brother, E. Douglas Southwick, to make possible lectures on the general theme of Death and Dying.

The Michael Heidelberger Lectures were begun in 1955 to honor the notable contributions of Dr. Heidelberger, now Professor Emeritus of Immunochemistry, and to stimulate further scientific progress in immunochemistry and related disciplines.

The David Seegal Lectureship and Visiting Professorship Fund, given by the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society and others, provides for the appointment of a visiting professor who is in residence for five days. During this time he or she delivers the David Seegal Lecture on Chronic Disease.

Prizes and Awards

The Distinguished Service Award oi the College of Physicians and Surgeons is given annually at Commencement exercises to a member of the faculty for outstanding contributions to medicine.

52 THE PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION

The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, the recipient of which traditionally gives a public lecture, was established under the will of the late S. Gross Horwitz in honor of his mother and is given annually in recognition of outstanding basic research in the fields of biology or biochemistry.

The Dr. Harold and Golden Lamport Research Awards were initiated in 1983 to recognize outstanding young researchers in basic science and in clinical science.

The Joseph Mather Smith Prize is awarded to the graduate of the College whose original research in medical subjects is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be the most meritorious.

The Stevens Triennial Prize is awarded to the person, not necessarily a graduate of the College, whose original research on any medical subject is deemed by the Dean's Advisory Committee on Honors and Awards to be the most meritorious.

The Dean's Award for Outstanding Contributions to Teaching was inaugurated in the mid-1970s as an appropriate way to recognize faculty members who are notably effective as teachers or leaders in education.

w 0

I

Postgraduate Programs

Opportunities for continuing medical education beyond the M.D. degree are offered at the College of Physicians and Surgeons through three major programs: (1) the training of specialists by means of hospital residencies; (2) special courses in general medicine and in the specialties, for practicing physicians and physicians in training who wish to renew and continue their educational experiences in the various fields of medicine; and (3) the Doctor of Medical Science Program, for physicians with particular interest and competence in research in the basic sciences. Further information about these programs may be obtained from the Office of the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine.

Graduate Training of Specialists

The program offers training opportunities through fellowships at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and residencies at affiliated hospitals for holders of the M.D. degree. Proper training for specialization includes four major elements. First, it provides a comprehensive clinical experience as a resident in a hospital that is equipped and staffed to provide graded responsibilities under the supervision of experts in the selected specialty. Second, it disciplines the resident in scientific attitudes toward health and disease and enriches the clinical experience through advanced training in those medical sciences that are largely concerned with the resident's specialty. Third, it enables the resident to see and to begin to understand the effect of illness on the individual patient and the response of that person to the illness and to the physician. The relationships that the resident physician develops with individual patients set the pattern for his or her participation in the delivery of health care after the completion of the residency. Finally, it gives the student the opportunity, either as a resident or as a fellow, to do basic or clinical research. This, in turn, may stimulate the type of creative productivity that may earn the student a recommendation for admission to a program leading to the award of the Doctor of Medical Science degree.

Postgraduate Courses for Practicing Physicians and Specialists

A variety of short courses have been organized at hospitals and clinics affiliated with the University; they are available at the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and at the other affiliated hospitals. No University credit or certificates are granted for these courses, but continuing medical education credit is granted through the Physicians Recognition Award of the American Medical Association.

Courses for the general practitioner furnish opportunities to keep abreast of new knowledge and the latest methods of diagnosis, treatment, and prevention; and to learn the indications, limitations, and value of those technical procedures that require the attention of a qualified specialist. The instruction consists largely of first-hand clinical experience, lectures, demonstra- tions, and discussion.

For those already practicing a specialty, advanced instruction is given in the therapeutic and diagnostic methods of certain limited fields of practice. Enrollment is limited to those who have the preparation necessary to enable them to benefit by the advanced instruction.

Program for the Doctor of Medical Science Degree

The University confers the Med.Sc.D. degree upon a few physicians who have completed a research project in one of the basic science fields. Only staff members of the Columbia- Presbyterian Medical Center are eligible for this degree. A minimum of two years of full-time work in the basic science field is required. Additional requirements include completion of a significant and original research project, the passing of comprehensive and oral examinations, and submission of a dissertation.

Departments of Instruction

Listed are only those faculty appointments and promotions approved by July 1, 1983.

The designation "also" is used with the name of an individual holding a joint appointment in two departments. The designation "in" is used when an individual holds an appointment in the department where listed, with assignment to the department named after the "in." In either case, the name appears in both departmental lists.

Anatomy and Cell Biology

Professor and Chairman

Michael D. Gershon. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., 1963

Professors

Melvin L. Moss. B.A., New York University, 1942; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

Charles R. Noback. B.S., Cornell, 1936; M.S., New York University, 1938; Ph.D., Minneso- ta, 1942

Karl H. Pfenninger. M.D., Zurich, 1971

Virginia M. Tennyson (also Pathology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S., Baylor, 1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Adjunct Professors

Manfred Otto Nahmmacher. Ph.D., Giessen (Germany), 1960

Samuel Rosner. M.D., Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons (Edinburgh), 1940; F.I.C.S., 1951

Professor of Clinical Surgery

Bard Cosman. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

Associate Professors

Ernest W. April. B.S., Tufts, 1961, Ph.D., Columbia, 1969

Philip W. Brandt. B.A., Swarthmore, 1952; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia,

1960 Stephen B. Doty (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965 Richard H. Kessin. B.A., Yale, 1966; Ph.D., Brandeis, 1971 Eladio A. Nunez. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1951; M.S., 1953; Ph.D., New York

University, 1964 Ann-Judith Silverman. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1967; Ph.D., 1970

Adjunct Associate Professor

Richard M. Hoar. B.A., Dartmouth, 1950; Ph.D., Kansas, 1956

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Arline D. Deitch. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1946; Ph.D., 1954

58 ANATOMY AND CELL BIOLOGY ANESTHESIOLOGY

Assistant Professors

Richard T. Ambron. B.S., Villanova, 1965; Ph.D., Temple, 1971

Craig H. Bailey (in Psychiatry and the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.A., Lehigh,

1967; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., 1973 John E. Bergmann. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1972; Ph.D., 1979 Halina D. Den (in Neurology). B.S., Frankfort, 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954;

Ph.D., Michigan, 1958 Christopher A. Gabel. B.S., Iowa State, 1975; Ph.D., Washington (Seattle), 1979 Masataka Kawai. B.A., Tokyo, 1966; Ph.D., Princeton, 1971 Marie-France Maylie. Baccalaureate, Algiers, 1960; L.esSc, Marseilles, 1963; Docteur de

Specialite, 1967; Ph.D., 1972 Tuan Due Pham (also Pharmacology). B.S., St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S., Loyola, 1967;

M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 John E. Pintar. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1970; Ph.D., Oregon, 1977 Samuel M. Schacher (in Psychiatry and the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.S.,

Columbia, 1971; M. A., 1974; Ph.D., 1976 Taube Pearl Rothman. B.A., City College (New York), 1969; Ph.D., Cornell, 1975 Klaudiusz R. Weiss (in Psychiatry) (in Dentistry) (in the Center for Neurobiology and

Behavior). M.A., Warsaw, 1967; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony Brook),

1973 Larry D. Witte (in Medicine). B.S., Iowa State, 1970; Ph.D., 1974

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Robert M. Bowker (in Psychiatry). B.S., Springfield, 1969; V.M.D., Pennsylvania, 1973;

Ph.D., 1979 Ian Blair Fries. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968

Associate Research Scientists

James P. Kelley. B.A., Harpur, 1966; Ph.D., Washington (St Louis), 1971 Robert F. Payette. B.A., Providence, 1969; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1974

SPECIAL LECTURER STAFF ASSOCIATES

Charles A. Ely, Ph.D. Linda B. Friedman, B.A.

Michael N. Lehman, Ph.D. SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Jakob Franke, M.D. INSTRUCTOR

Diane L. Sherman, B.S. Sharon C. Colacino, Ph.D.

Anesthesiology

Professor and Chairman

Henrik H. Bendixen. M.D., Copenhagen, 1951

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Mieczyslaw Finster (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland), 1941;

M.D., Geneva, 1957 Lester C. Mark. M.D., Toronto, 1941

Gabriel G. Nahas. M.D., Toulouse, 1944; Ph.D., Minnesota, 1953 Shih-Hsun Ngai (also Pharmacology). M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1944

ANESTHESIOLOGY 59

Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Leonard Brand. B.S., Yale, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Edgar C. Hanks. B.A., Gettysburg, 1943; M.D., Jefferson, 1947

Ernest Salanitre. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1936; M.D., Rome, 1942

Adjunct Professor

Sidney Spector (also Pharmacology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jefferson, 1956

Associate Professors

Allen I. Hyman (also Pediatrics). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College,

1959 Hisayo O. Morishima. M.D., Toho (Tokyo), 1951; Ph.D., Tokyo, 1959 Eugene J. Pantuck. B.S., Tufts, 1959; M.D., 1963 J. Gilbert Stone. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1964 Lubos Triner. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1955; Ph.D., 1961

Associate Clinical Professor

Jen-Tieng Wung. M.D., Taipei Medical College, 1956

Associate Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Hoshang Jal Khambatta. M.D., Karachi, 1958

Richard S. Matteo. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1955 Hilda Pedersen. M.B., Ch.B., Edinburgh, 1958

Assistant Professors

Jeffrey Askanazi. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1971; M.D., State University of New

York (Syracuse), 1975 Keith J. Bernstein. B.A., New York University, 1968; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1974 Donald Bluh. B.A., Columbia, 1973; M.S., Stanford, 1975; M.D., Columbia, 1980 Richard Y. Z. Chen. M.D., National Taiwan (Taipei), 1971 Arvin H. Chin. B.S., Cornell, 1970; M.D., 1974; J.D., Columbia, 1981 Michael C. Damask. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1970; M.D., Chicago Medical School,

1974 Arthur Donald Finck. B.S., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Ingrid Anne-Marie Fitz-James. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1973; M.D., Columbia, 1977 Darrell Goode. B.S., Clark, 1972; M.D., Tufts, 1980 Geordie P. Grant. B.S., William and Mary, 1968; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1978 Warren K. Grodin. B.A., Minnesota, 1967; M.D., London, 1975 Vance Lauderdale. B.A., Harvard, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1947 Laurence P. Mark. B.S., Harvey Mudd, 1975; M.D., Columbia, 1979 Pat J. Martin. B.S., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Samantha Mullis. B.S., Michigan State, 1975; M.D., 1979 Mark William Ollinger. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1975; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1979 Eugene Ornstein. M.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1973; Ph.D., 1977; M.D., Miami

(Florida), 1979

60 ANESTHESIOLOGY

Leila M. Pang (also Pediatrics). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1970 Nancy Paetzold. B.S., Adelphi, 1973; M.D., Columbia, 1978 Richard K. Raker. B.A., Michigan, 1969; M.D., 1973 David M. Richlin. B.A., Drew, 1970; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry,

1974 Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969; M.D.,

Cornell, 1973 Jeffrey Sherman. B.A., State University of New York (Downstate), 1973; M.D., New York

Medical College, 1978 Yvonne Vulliemoz. M.S., Lausanne, 1956; Ph.D., Paris, 1969 Stephen Weitzman. B.A., Bowdoin, 1974; M.D., Columbia, 1978 Sook Young Woo. B.S., Ewha Women s University (Seoul), 1968; M.D., 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Dorothy A. Black. B.A., Rutgers, 1957; M.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Donald C. Brody. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1956

Kathryn A. W. Cozine. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1961

Ellise S. Delphin. B.A., Barnard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975

Alber Faltas. M.D., Kasr-El-Ainy Medical School (Egypt), 1961

Carolyn P. Greenberg. B.A., Stanford, 1962; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1966

John W. Hennessey. B.S., Massachusetts, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1966

Ina Lieberman. B.A., Barnard, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968

Peter Salgo. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975

Kevin B. Sanborn. B.S., Manhattan, 1969; M.D., New York University 1973

Medhat Riad Wassef. M.B., B.Ch., Cairo, 1957

Gerald S. Weinberger. M.D., New York University, 1948

Howard Wulfson. B.S., City College (New York), 1966; M.D., State University of New York

(Upstate), 1970 Joseph Chuan-Shih Yang. B.S., Taiwan, 1959; M.D., Medical Academy (Dusseldorf), 1964

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology

Robert Dworkin. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1971; Ph.D., Harvard, 1977

INSTRUCTOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Chi-man Lo, M.D. Marcia Kemper, B.A.

Michael Lauria, M.S.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Richard Charles Meyer, B.A.

Salha S. Daniel, Ph.D. Carol Pantuck, B.A.

Mariagnes Verosky, B.A. Susan Shaw, B.S. Alvin Wald, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Andrew L. Rauscher. M.B., London, 1963; M.B., B.S., University College Hospital, 1966

Assistant Clinical Professors

William R. Crawford. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1962 Edward Palmer. B.A., Dartmouth, 1967; M.D., Cornell, 1971

ANESTHESIOLOGY 61

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology

Herbert G. Cave. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1942; M.D., Howard, 1947

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Mita Dhruvkumar Gunderia. B.S., Wilson (Bombay), 1970; M.D., Grarit (Bombay), 1976

Archibald K. Hinds. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.D., Montpellier, 1962

Hermann Mazard. B.S., Haiti, 1955; M.D., 1975

Gilbert Phanor. B.S., Lycee T. Gilboro, 1953; M.D., Medical School of Haiti, 1960

Madisetti Swamy. M.B., B.S., Osmania (India), 1954

J. Sinclair Trimiar. B.S., Howard, 1960; D.D.S., 1964

Francis Weekes. B.S., Johnson C. Smith, 1941; D.D.S., Meharry, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Samuel C. Brisbane. B.A., Lincoln, 1937; M.D., Howard, 1949 Oscar N. Graves. B.A., Lincoln, 1944; M.D., Howard, 1949

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

John Rocco Calabro. B.S., Manhattan, 1971; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1975 Henry A. Connolly, Jr. B.S., Fordham, 1951; M.D., Hamburg, 1955 Demetrios B. Kalas. M.D., Aristotelian, 1954 Mary Louise White. B.S., Maryland, 1943; M.D., 1945

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIOLOGY Sami A. M. Abadir, M.D. Jane deV. Stark, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Professor

Louise Blancato. B.S., Fordham, 1942; M.D., New York Medical College, 1945

Assistant Professors of Clinical Anesthesiology

Enzio Gallozzi. M.D., Rome, 1953

Joseph lacovelli. B.A., Buffalo, 1952; M.D., Bologna, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professor

Ronald A. Andree. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1955; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1959

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

ANESTHESIOLOGY ANESTHESIOLOGY

Guglielmina Bettini, M.D. Hussein Dilber, M.D.

Hilda S. Liu, M.D. Julio M. Garcia Rodriguez, M.D.

Alfred T. C. Peng, M.D. Byung Yang Kim, M.D.

Altagracia H. Polanco, M.D. Zdan J. Korduba, M.D.

62 ANESTHESIOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY

INSTRUCTORS (continued) INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Han Chiang Lee, M.D. Nimal Patel, M.D.

Ignacio U. Ngo, M.D. Kenneth A. Rothenberg, M.D.

Kyaw Nyunt, M.B., B.S. Kristappa Sangavaram, M.D.

Biochemistry

Robert Wood Johnson, Jr., Professor and Chairman

Isidore S. Edelman. B.A., Indiana, 1941; M.D., 1944

Professors

Richard Axel (also Pathology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970

Reinhold Benesch. B.Sc, Leeds, 1941; M.Sc, 1945; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1950

Ruth E. Benesch. B.Sc, London, 1946; Ph.D., Northwestern, 1951

Max A. Eisenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1938; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Duke,

1950 Philip Feigelson. B.S, Queens (New York), 1947; Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1951 Robert F. Goldberger. M.D., New York University, 1958 Dezider Grunberger (also Public Health). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D.,

Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; ScD., 1968 Barry Honig. B.Sc, Polytechnic Institute (Brooklyn), 1963; M.A., Johns Hopkins, 1964;

Ph.D., Weizmann Institute (Israel), 1968 Arthur Karlin (also Neurology). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Alvin I. Krasna. B.A., Yeshiva, 1950; Ph.D., Columbia, 1955 Seymour Lieberman (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois,

1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941 Barbara W. Low. B.A., Oxford, 1942; M.A., 1946; D.Phil., 1948 Maurice M. Rapport (in Psychiatry). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; Ph.D.,

California Institute of Technology, 1946 Parithychery Srinivasan. B.Sc, Madras, 1946; Ph.D., 1953

Adjunct Professor

Benno P. Schoenborn. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1958; Ph.D., New South Wales (Australia), 1962

Associate Professors

Roger M. Burnett. B.Sc, The Polytechnic (London), 1964; Ph.D., Purdue, 1970 Allen M. Gold. B.A., Chicago, 1950; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Adjunct Associate Professor

John D. Karkas. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Research Scientist

David Elwyn (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

George Alexander (in Psychiatry). B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953 Frederick W. Alt. B.S., Brandeis, 1971; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978 Hagan P. Bayley. B.A., Oxford, 1974; Ph.D., 1979

BIOCHEMISTRY DERMATOLOGY 63

Gerard Bricogne. MaJtrise de Matbematique, Nancy (France), 1971; Diplome d'Engenieur,

1972; Ph.D., Cambridge, 1977 Stephen Goff. B.A., Amherst, 1973; Ph.D., Stanford 1978 Lee Makowski. B.S., Brown, 1971; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 1973;

Ph.D., 1976 Herbert L. Meltzer (in Psychiatry). B.S., Long Island, 1942: Ph.D.. Columbia. 1950 James L. Roberts (in the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). B.S.,

Colorado State, 1973; Ph.D., Oregon, 1977 Bonnie Ann Wallace. Ph.D., Yale, 1977

Associate Research Scientists

Robert N. Cox. B.A., Stanford, 1966; Ph.D., Columbia. 1978

Jade Li. Ph.D., Harvard 1978

Sahebarao Mahadik (in Psychiatry). Ph.D., Poona (India), 1969

Laura Ponticorvo. Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Alexander Rashin. Candidate, Protein Research Academy of Sciences (USSR). 1977

Eftihia Tzilianos. M.Sc, Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1968; Ph.D., 1972

Adjunct Associate Research Scientist

Barry Potvin. B.A., Brandeis, 1968; Ph.D., North Carolina, 1973

SPECIAL LECTURERS ASSOCIATE

Erwin Chargaff; Ph.D. Carola P. Zimmerman, Ph.D.

Zacharias Dische, M.D. (in Ophthalmology)

David Nachmansohn, M.D. (in Neurology) STAFF ASSOCIATE

David B. Sprinson, Ph.D. Susanna Yung Kwong, M.S.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Philip E. Bourne, Ph.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Adjunct Associate Professor

Theodore Peters, Jr. B.S., Lehigh, 1943; Ph.D.. Harvard 1950

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Leonard A. Sauer. B.S., Cornell 1956; M.D.. Rochester. 1961: Ph.D.. Rockefeller. 1966

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Research Scientists

Utapalendu S. Maitra. M.S., Calcutta, 1963; Ph.D., 1971

Venkitachalem P. Mohan. B.Sc., Kerala (India), 1969; M.Sc. 1971; Ph.D.. Indian Institute of Science, 1977

Dermatology

Richard and Mildred Rhodebeck Professor and Chairman

Leonard C. Harber. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., New York University. 1953

64 DERMATOLOGY

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Richard L. Edelson. B.A., Hamilton, 1966; M.D., Yale, 1970

Clinical Professor

Saul L. Sanders. B.A., Kenyan, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1952

Associate Professor of Clinical Dermatology

Maureen B. Poh. B.S., Siena, 1964; M.D., Tennessee, 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

Jack Eisert. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956 David N. Silvers (also Pathology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968 Robert R. Walther. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., North Carolina, 1973 Richard L. Walzer. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Assistant Professors

Robert B. Armstrong. B.A., Haverford, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973 Carole Louise Berger (in Pathology). B.S., City College (New York), 1966; M.A., Columbia, 1971; M.S., 1974; Ed.D., 1976

Assistant Clinical Professors

Irving Abrahams. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1954 Vincent S. Beltrani. B.A., Brooklyn, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Einar A. Juhlin. B.S., Illinois, 1950; M.D., Royal Charles (Sweden), 1957 Steven R. Kohn. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1968 Theodor A. Labow. B.S., Miami (Florida), 1951; M.D., Tufts, 1955 Jack H. Rozen. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1958; M.D., 1962

Associate Research Scientist

Francis P. Gasparro. B.S., Villanova, 1966; Ph.D., Princeton, 1971

SPECIAL LECTURERS INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ASSISTANTS (conf/nuec/)-

Margarita S. Hutner, Ph.D. DERMATOLOGY gH^^^ ^ Pj^j^^^^^ ^-^

J. Lowry Miller, M.D. Timothy J. Corey, M.D. Carmen J. Garcia, M.D.

Leon K. Demar, M.D. Bruce E. Katz, M.D.

LECTURER Jeffrey S. Kezis, M.D. joan P. Noroff, M.D.

Angelo A. Lamola, Ph.D. Joseph A. Penner, M.D. Margaret S. Ravits, M.D.

Douglas Pravda, M.D. Kass Sadri, M.D.

n^^ATomr't^^"''^''^ J°^^Ph S. Shapiro, M.D. Robert S. Seibt, M.D.

DERMATOLOGY Luis A. Suarez, M.D. George E. Thome, M.D. William G. Atwood, M.D. ^

Robert P. Feinstein, M.D. ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

Paul Ira Schneiderman, M.D. DERMATOLOGY STAFF ASSOCIATES

Eugene W. Sweeney, M.D. Robert M. Bernstein, M.D. Debra Ann Kaden, Ph.D.

Harvey I. Weinberg, M.D. William J. Cunningham, M.D. Massimo Sassaroli, Ph.D.

DERMATOLOGY HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT 65

At. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Alexander W. Young, Jr. B.S., Maryland, 1944; M.D., 1946

Assistant Clinical Professors

William P. DePietro. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1972; M.D., Georgetown,

1976 Herbert H. Hochman. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., Tulane, 1970 Peter C. Lombardo. B.S., Rochester, 1955; M.D., Albany, 1959 David Sibulkin. B.A., New York University, 1962; M.D., 1966 Gregory Zalar. B.S., George Washington, 1965; M.D., 1969

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL DERMATOLOGY

Joshua S. Berger, M.D. Elaine V. DiGrande, M.D.

Human Genetics and Development

Professor and Chairman

Charles R. Cantor. B.A., Columbia, 1963; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1963

Professors

Kimball C. Atwood. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., New York University, 1946

Arthur Bank (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., Harvard, 1960

Arthur D. Bloom (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Argiris Efstratiadis. Dr.Med.Sci., Athens, 1971; M.D., 1966; Ph.D., Harvard, 1976

Georgiana Jagiello (also Virgil Damon Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Boston,

1949; M.D, Tufts, 1955 Elvin A. Kabat (also Microbiology) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Orlando J. Miller (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950

Professor of Mathematical Statistics and Genetics

Howard Levene (in Biological Sciences and Mathematical Statistics). B.A., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., Columbia, 1947

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

L. Erlenmyer-Kimling. B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D., 1960 John D. Rainer. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.A., 1944; M.D., 1951

Adjunct Professors

Sidney Udenfriend. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; Ph.D., New York

University, 1948 Arthur Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; Ph.D., George Washington,

1957 Herbert Weissbach. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; M.S., George Washington,

1955; Ph.D., 1957

66 HUMAN GENETICS AND DEVELOPMENT MEDICINE

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics

Dorothy Warburton. B.S., McGill, 1957; Ph.D., 1961

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ronald H. Kaback. B.A., Haverford, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Michael Ian Sherman. B.Sc, McGill, 1965; Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony

Brook), 1969 David Webb. B.A., California State, 1966; M.A., 1968; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Assistant Professors

Jurgen Brosius. B.A., Johann Wolfgang Goethe (Frankfort), 1974; Ph.D., Max-Planck

Institut, 1976 Frank Costantini. B.S., Yale, 1974; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1980 Debra Wolgemuth. B.A., Gettysburg, 1969; M.A., Vanderbilt, 1971; M.Phil., Columbia,

1975; Ph.D., 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Mary Rita Greenwood. B.A., Vassar, 1968; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1973

Assistant Professor of Clinical Human Genetics and Development

Marian B. Carlson. B.A., Radcliffe, 1973; Ph.D., Stanford, 1978

Associate Research Scientist

Jye-Siung Fang. B.S., National Taiwan, 1962; Ph.D., Kansas State, 1971

LECTURER STAFF ASSOCIATES

Jerard Hurwitz, Ph.D. Kiran Kumar Chada, B.A.

Sheldon 1. Feinstein, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Margot Kaelbling, Ph. D .

Carl S. Dobkin, Ph.D. Anita A. Lustenberger, M.S. Harlow K. Fischman, Ph.D. Cassandra L. Smith, Ph.D.

Medicine

Bard Professor of Medicine and Chairman

Robert M. Glickman. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Physiology). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1962

Arthur Bank (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D.,

Harvard, 1960 J. Thomas Bigger (also Pharmacology). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Vincent P. Butler, Jr. B.A., St. Peter's, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Robert E. Canfield. B.S., Lehigh, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1957

MEDICINE 67

Paul J. Cannon. B.A., Holy Cross, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958

Leonard Chess. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1964; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1968 Rose R. Ellison (in the Cancer Center). B.A., Barnard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1948 Andrew G. Frantz. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 DeWitt S. Goodman (Tilden-Weger-Bieler Professor of Preventive Medicine). B.A., Harvard,

1951; M.D., 1955 Robert I. Levy. B.A., Cornell, 1957; M.D., Yale, 1961 John N. Loeb. B.A., Harvard, 1957; M.D., 1961

Harold C. Neu (also Pharmacology). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Hymie Nossel. M.B., Ch.B., Cape Town, 1953; Ph.D., Oxon, 1962 Elliott F. Osserman (American Cancer Society Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D.,

1947 Benvenuto Pernis (also Microbiology). M.D., Milan, 1947 Donald F. Tapley. B.S., Acadia, 1948; M.D., Chicago, 1952 Gerard M. Turino. B.A., Princeton, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1948 I. Bernard Weinstein (also Public Health). B.S., Wisconsin, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

Felix E. Demartini. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D., 1946

Donald A. Holub. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1952

Israel Jaffe. B.S., New York University, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Edgar Leifer. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A., Columbia, 1939; Ph.D.,

1941; M.D., 1946 Thomas Q. Morris. B.A., Notre Dame, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Robert Palmer. B.A., Oberlin, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957 Joseph C. Sweeting. B.S., Holy Cross, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1956 Robert N. Taub. B.A., Yeshiva, 1957; M.D., Yale, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1969 Robert T. Whitlock. B.A., North Carolina, 1950; M.D., 1957

Professors of Social Medicine

David J. Rothman (Bernard Schoenberg Professor) (Director, Center for the Study of Society and Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.A., Harvard, 1959; Ph.D., 1964

Robert J. Weiss (also Psychiatry and Public Health). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Clinical Professors

John R. Edsall. B.A., Cambridge, 1945; M.B., B.Ch., 1948 Jay 1. Meltzer. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Richard J. Stock. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947 John A. Wood. B.A., Harvard, 1943; M.D., 1946

Associate Professors

Leslie Baer. B.A., Wisconsin, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

John P. Bilezikian (also Pharmacology). B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Peter R. B. Caldwell. B.A., Dartmouth, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1958

Karen L. Kaplan. B.A., Miami (Ohio), 1963; Ph.D., M.D., Chicago, 1969

Alan Tall. M.B., B.S., Sydney (Australia), 1970

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

Ronald E. Drusin. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Yale Enson. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1953

68 MEDICINE

Dorothy Estes. B.S., Wheaton (Massachusetts), 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Glenda J. Garvey. B.A., Wellesley, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Elsa-Grace V. Giardina. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., New York Medical College, 1965

Robert H. Heisenbuttel. B.A., Thiel, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Wylie C. Hembree III (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D.,

Washington (St. Louis), 1964 Thomas P. Jacobs. B.A., Amherst, 1964; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1968 George W. Melcher, Jr. B.A., Colorado, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946 Jane H. Morse. B.A., Smith, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955 James A. Reiffel. B.A., Duke, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Frank R. Smith. B.A., Dartmouth, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Francis M. Weld. B.A., Harvard 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Associate Clinical Professors

Ralph S. Blume. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

John O. Burris. B.S., Wyoming, 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1956

Michael H. Cohen. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1961; M.D., 1965

Peter A. Gross. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., Yale, 1964

Lionel Grossbard. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

George A. Hyman. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., 1945

Abbie I. Knowlton. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

William Lovejoy. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1962

David J. McConnell. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., Yale, 1962

George H. McCormack, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Hans Neuberg. B.A., Wagner, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1950

Michael F. Parry. B.A., Yale, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Eve E. Slater. B.A., Vassar, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971

Jeffrey A. Stein. B.A., Harvard I960; M.D., 1965

Earl A. Wheaton, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Associate Clinical Professor of Social Medicine

Eric Marcus (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969

Research Scientist

Gerson Joskowicz. M.S., Technische, 1973; Ph.D., 1979

Assistant Professors

Gerald B. Appel. B.A., Cornell, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Gary R. Burke. B.A., St. Mary's, 1969; M.D., Minnesota, 1973

Louis D. Carmichael. B.A., Harvard, 1969; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1976

Rita A. Charon. B.A., Bensalem, 1970; M.D., Harvard 1978

Herbert Chase, Jr. B.A., Brown, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1974

Randolph Cole. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1973

James Coromilas. B.S., Columbia, 1969; M.D., McGill, 1975

Nicholas Davidson. MB., B.S., Kings College Hospital Medical School (London), 1974

Oliver T. Fein. B.A., Swarthmore, 1962; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1967

Steven M. Friedman. B.A., Princeton, 1968; M.D., Cornell, 1972

Ira Jay Goldberg. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1971; M.D., Harvard, 1975

Steven Grant. M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1973

Richard S. Haber. B.A., Harvard, 1973; M.D., New York University, 1977

Kung-Ming Jan (also Physiology). M.B., National Taiwan, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971

MEDICINE 69

David S. Leibowitz. B.A., Columbia, 1972; M.D., 1977

Arthur M. Magun. B.A., Haverford, 1972; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1977

Alfred I. Neugut. Ph.D., M.D., Columbia, 1977

Allen Bryant Nichols. B.A., Yale, 1961; M.D., Virginia, 1971

Juan Oliver. B.A., Bachiller Institute, 1961; M.D., Barcelona (Spain), 1967

John Owen. B.ScM., McMaster (Ontario), 1972; M.D., 1974

Constance Park. B.A., Radcliffe, 1964; M.S., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Marjorie Perloff. B.A., Bennington, 1965; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1969

Eric R. Powers. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., Harvard, 1974

Alice S. Prince. B.A., Wellesley, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975

Dennis S. Reison. B.A., Yale, 1971; M.D., Stanford, 1975

Stanley H. Rosenbaum (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., Harvard, 1969;

M.D., Cornell, 1973 Elizabeth Shane. B.S., Dalhousie (Canada), 1969; M.D., Toronto, 1975 Ethel S. Siris. B.A., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971 David Mark Stern. B.S, Yale, 1973; M.D., Harvard, 1978 Sharon Wardlaw. B.S., Cornell, 1970; M.D., 1975 Jeffrey Weitz. M.D., Ottawa, 1976

Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Larry D. Witte. B.S., Iowa State, 1970; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Physiology

Hugh Nellans. B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971

Assistant Professor of Social Medicine

Jerry Fihkel (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Ronald D. Adelman. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1974; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1978

Lester W. Blair. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

David K. Blood. B.A., Amherst, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Conrad B. Blum. B.S., Northwestern, 1969; M.D., 1971

Peter J. Buchin. B.A., Williams, 1970; M.D., Yale, 1974

David J. Cohen. B.A., Michigan, 1970; M.D., New York University, 1972

Robert H. DeBellis. B.S., Queens (New York), 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Kenneth C. Fine. M.D., Catholic (Belgium), 1970

Jerry Gliklich. B.A., Columbia, 1969; M.D., 1975

Mark J. Goldberger. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Peter Green. M.B., B.S., Sydney, 1970

Victoria E. Guy. B.A., Duke, 1968; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1976

Lynne L. Johnson. B.A., Wellesley, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Rima Gail Kopelman. B.A., Barnard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1977

Cheryl Kunis. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1975

Rafael A. Lantigua. M.D., Autonomous (Santo Domingo), 1972

Oscar Lebwohl. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard 1972

Benjamin H. Lewis. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1973; M.D., California (San Francisco),

1977 Frank S. Livelli. B.A., Columbia, 1972; M.D., Harvard 1976 Aaron Manson. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1972; M.D., 1976 David M. Margulies. B.A., Amherst, 1973; M.D., Harvard, 1977 Robert McConnell. B.A., Hamilton, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

70 MEDICINE

J. Gregory Mears. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973

Robin 0. Motz. B.A., Columbia, 1959; Ph.D., 1965; M.D., 1975

Marcia Naveh. M.S., Tulane, 1972; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1977

Carmen Ortiz-Neu. B.A., Wellesley, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Martin W. Oster. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971

Kenneth M. Prager. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Harvard, 1968

Marshall Primack. B.A., Louisville, 1961; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1965

Barrie Lynn Raik. B.A., Harpur, 1967; M.D., New York University, 1977

Frederick G. Rapoport. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

John L. Roglieri. B.A., B.S., Lehigh, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1966

Mario Romagnoli. B.S., Fordham, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976

Harvey A. Schneier. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1967

Peter E. Schrag. B.A., Harvard I960; M.D., 1964

Lewis P. Schreider. B.A., Queens (New York), 1974; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1978 Allan Schwartz. B.S., City College (New York), 1967; M.S., Harvard, 1968; M.D., Columbia,

1974 Brian Scully. B.A., Dublin, 1969; M.B., B.Ch., 1971 Alan H. Seplowitz. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., 1972 William H. Sherman. B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1967; M.D., Jefferson, 1969 Richard V. Sims III. B.A., Amherst, 1970; M.D., Harvard 1974 Marjorie Slankard-Chahinian. B.A., Missouri, 1967; M.D., 1971 Leonard Stern. B.A., Brooklyn, 1972; M.D., New York Medical College, 1975 Mark Stoopler. B.S., Tulane, 1971; M.D., Cornell, 1974 Joseph Tenenbaum. B.A., Brandeis, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1974 Byron Thomashow. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974 Jack B. Weissman. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Harvard, 1970 Gail S. Williams. B.A., Wellesley, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968 Chun Keung Yip. B.S., St Francis (New York), 1972; MD., Albert Einstein, 1976

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Dena Fisher. B.A., Queens (New York), 1965; M.S. W., New York University, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alfred Becker. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Richard B, Duane, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Juan G. Edreira. M.D., Havana, 1951

Daniel L. Larson. M.D., Columbia, 1946

Arnold Lisio. B.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1961

Daniel L. Macken. B.A., Holy Cross, 1955; M.D., Boston, 1960

John Postley. B.A., Yale, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968

Nicholas Rango. B.S., St. Louis, 1966; M.D., Northwestern, 1970

Arthur I. Snyder. B.A., Columbia, 1946; M.D., 1950

Cornelius J. Tyson. B.A., Princeton, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1943

Associate Research Scientists

Steven Birken. Ph.D., St. John 's (New York), 1972

William S. Blaner. B.S, Maryland, 1972; M.S., Tennessee, 1975; Ph.D., 1979 Bonnie A. Bray. B.S., Georgia, 1950; Ph.D., Columbia, 1963 Joseph Cornicelli. B.S., Cincinnati, 1973; M.S., 1975; Ph.D., 1978

Paul H. Ehrlich. B.S., State University of New York (Stony Brook), 1971; Ph.D., Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, 1976 Mary Ann Gawinowicz. B.A., Douglass, 1974; Ph.D., Columbia, 1978

MEDICINE 71

Chung Yuan Liu. B.S., Taiwan Provincial Chung Hsing, 1958; M.S., North Dakota, 1968;

Ph.D., Illinois Institute of Technology, 1974 Mohamed M. Osman. D. V.M., Cairo, 1967

Ildiko Radichevich. M.A., Ukrainian Technological, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1958 Steven L. Roffman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1965; M.S., New York University, 1968;

Ph.D., 1973 Robert R. Sciacca. B.S., Columbia, 1971; M.S., 1974

Dianne R. Soprano. B.S., Newton College of the Sacred Heart, 1975; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1980 Gabriel Tsuboyamo. M.D., Universite Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, 1976

SPECIAL LECTURERS Henry Aranow, Jr., M.D. Hylan A. Bickerman, M.D. Andre F. Cournand, M.D. Albert R. Lamb, Jr., M.D. Hamilton Southworth, M.D. Alfred Steiner, M.D.

LECTURERS

Nicholas P. Christy, M.D. Edward E. Fischel, M.D. William M. Manger, M.D. John H. McClement, M.D. Henry M. Thomas HI, M.D. Melvin B. Weiss, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Marcia B. Bull, M.D. Elias M. Kaimakliotis, M.D. Robert Lewy, M.D. Alan L. Saroff, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN SOCIAL MEDICINE

Arthur L. Caplan, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR

Renaud Beauwens, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Kenneth S. Bannerman, M.D. Howard J. Barnum, M.D. Kapil N. Bhalla, M.B., Ch.B. David N. Burns, M.D. Jorge Cortes-Quinones, M.D. Ann P. D'Adamo, M.D. Arthur R. DeSimone, M.D. Kevin J. Ferrick, M.D. Michael Goldman, M.D. Susan N. Greenberg, M.D. Lonnie B. Hanauer, M.D. Ralph Herz, Jr., M.D. Alexander A. Hindenberg, M.D. Alan I. Kalischer, M.D. Thomas R. Kleyman, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS {continued)

Richard Kornbluth, M.D. Pier Mancusi-Ungaro, M.D. Zandra Rios-Rivera, M.D. Jane S. Sillman, M.D. David B. Sutter, M.D. Natalie J. Warner, M.D. Christine Weart, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Helen-Ann Garcia, M.D. Joseph Heller, M.D. Howard M. Kipen, M.D. Gregory Klomp, M.D. Mato L. Marinovich, M.D. John E. McWhorter, M.D. Milovan T. Rakic, M.D. Thomas J. Rakowski, M.D. John M. Rodgers, M.D. Richard H. Runser, M.D. Adele Tedeschi, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES Michael Drillings, M.S. Joan Sobel, M.S.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Gordon A. Campbell, Ph.D. Joseph Mario Cerreta, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Bernadette Adams, B.S. Alice S. Appel, Ph.D. John Thomas Barnard, M.D. Carlos Barreda, B.S. Doris Tse Eng, B.A. Sylvia H. Ford, M.A. Donald L. Gammon, B.S. Kuniyo Kato, D.V.M. Alexander Krichevsky, D.V.M. Kallioppe S. LaGamma, B.S. Gilbert Le Cren, B.A. Westley H. Reeves, M.D. Henri H. Roche, M.D. Robert E. Sundeen Dominique A. Weber, L.esSc.

72 MEDICINE

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

John S. Davis. B.A., Hamilton, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956

Walter Franck. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

Gary S. Hoffman. B.A., Harpur, 1964; M.S., Howard, 1967; M.D., Medical College of

Virginia, 1971 Herbert J. Marx. B.E.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Peter L. Arquin. M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1972

Lewis L. Hamilton. B.S., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

Emery C. Herman. B.A., Emory, 1949; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1953

Richard J. Horner. B.A., Dartmouth, 1966; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Peter J. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1971; M.D., CM., McGill, 1975

Alan J. Kozak. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., 1969

Antionette Kuzminski. B.A., Smith, 1967; M.A., Rochester, 1970; M.D., Hawaii, 1977

Don V. Lewis. B.A., North Carolina, 1967; M.D., 1971

John J. May. B.S., Notre Dame, 1969; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1973

Nancy Beth Merrell. B.S., Wayne State, 1970; Ph.D., 1972; M.D., 1976

Thomas M. Miller. B.A., Oberlin, 1973; M.D., North Carolina, 1977

William H. Mook. B.A., Wesleyan, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944

David S. Pratt. B.A., New Hampshire, 1967; M.D., Tufts, 1971

Donald A. Raddatz. B.A., Holy Cross, 1971; M.D., Minnesota, 1975

Allan G. Ramsay. B.A., Western Ontario, 1974; M.D., 1948

William H. Ramsay. B.A., Dartmouth, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Richard E. Reese. B.A., Dartmouth, 1965; M.D., Harvard, 1969

Dennis A. Savoie. B.A., Providence, 1967; M.D., Vermont, 1971

Michael S. Schwartzman. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1973; M.D., Medical College of Virginia,

1978 Robert S. Sioussat. B.A., Wesleyan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951 William Streck. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968; M.D., Missouri, 1973 Davis S. Svahn. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1965 Steven E. Szebenyi. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1974; M.D., 1978 David W. Vaules. B.A., Dartmouth, 1960; B.M.S., 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1963 Gary Weaver. Goshen, 1964; M.D., Kansas, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professor

Donald O. Pollock. B.A., Hamilton, 1951; M.D., Harvard, 1955

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE Maria Mendel, M.D. Kenneth Wilkins, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professors

John Lindenbaum. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Harvard, 1959

Gerald E. Thomson (Samuel Lambert Professor). B.S., Queens (New York), 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959

MEDICINE 73

Clinical Professors

Harold S. Ballard. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1948; M.D., Meharry, 1952 Kenneth Sterling. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

David Jocelyn Clain. M.B., Ch.B., Cape Town, 1959; M.D., 1968

Charles P. Felton. B.Sc., Xavier, 1949; M.D., Geneva, 1956

Clayton L. Natta. B.A., McMaster (Ontario), 1957; M.D., Toronto, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

George C. Branche. B.A., Bowdoin, 1944; M.D., Boston, 1948

John B. Cromie. M.D., Belfast (Northern Ireland), 1949

William R. Cunnick, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Jeanne A. Smith. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957

Charles M. Yergan. B.S., Columbia, 1944; M.D., 1947

Assistant Professors

Ann M. Briscoe. M.A., Vassar, 1945; Ph.D., Yale, 1949 Thomas J. Garrett. M.D., Queens (Ontario), 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Jay Brown. B.A., Rutgers, 1964; M.D., New York University, 1968

Jen-Tse Cheng. M.D., National Taiwan, 1961

Peter C. T. Dickinson. B.S., McGill, 1958; M.D., 1962

Jay Franklin Dobkin. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., Harvard, 1972

Donald A. Feinfeld. B.A., Rochester, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Kenneth J. Herwig. B.A., Syracuse, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1971

Wanda Devora Huff. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., Yale, 1973

Hazeline Nurse. B.A., Hunter, 1965; M.D., Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1969

David G. Savage. B.A., Wesleyan, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

James T. Chien. M.D., Yale-in-China Medical College, 1943 Marvin C. Cooper. B.S., Queens (New York), 1960; M.D., St. Louis, 1965 Milena L. Lewis. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Bruce David Logan. B.A., Colby, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1972 Richard R. Prouty. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1948

SPECIAL LECTURER Cecil G. Marquez, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Douglas Miller, M.D.

ASSCX:iATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

John C. DiJohn, M.D. Pearl D. Foster, M.D. Paul Killian, M.D. Anthony J. Marano, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Viola Anderson, M.D. Alfred Robert Ashford, M.D. Jeffrey N. Bradshaw, M.D. Valentine J. Burroughs, M.D. Bennie W. Chiles, M.D. Carl A. Gamier, M.D. Major Geer, M.D. Michael H. Gordon, M.D. Ross T. Hamilton, M.D. Barbara J. Harmon, M.D. James H. Hubert, M.D. Thomas J. Mattimore, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE {continued]

Shahab Momtazi, M.D. Clarence S. Murray, M.D. Luigi M. F. Negri, M.D. Christopher J. Nickerson, M.D. Ruth C. Onukwue, M.D. Wilmcr J. Petite, Jr., M.D. Velvie Ann Progue, M.D. Jon Rothenberg, M.D. William J. Schwartz, M.D. Mark 1. Siegel, M.D. Earl J. Vandenbush, M.D. Michael D. Williams, M.D.

74 MEDICINE

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine

Robert Lindsay. M.P.C.B., Glasgow, 1968; Ph.D., 1969

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Professor of Clinical Medicine

Albert S. Klainer. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts, 1961

Assistant Clinical Professors

Oscar Kruesi. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1947; M.D., Cornell, 1951 Robert V. McCormick. B.S., Harvard, 19U; M.D., 1946

Joseph J. Ryan. B.S., Notre Dame, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate) 1970

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Kenneth Adler, M.D. Mark T. Atkins, M.D. Hillel Ben-Asher, M.D. Donald P. Burt, M.D. Joel E. Cannila, M.D. Alan Chanin, M.D. Bernard Davidoff, M.D. John J. Delaney, M.D. Barry Efros, M.D. Joel R. L. Ehrenkran2, M.D. Joseph F. Fennelly, M.D. Arthur Fisch, M.D. Arthur Geller, M.D. Lee W. Geller, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE [continued)

Gary Gerstein, M.D. Stephen Guss, M.D. Arthur Hoaglund, M.D. Thomas R. Holland, M.D. Ibrahim Housri, M.D. Stephen Krasnica, M.D. David S. Lerman, M.D. Stelio Mangiola, M.D. Sudhir H. Mehta. M.D. Earl Nielson, M.D. Celso S. Puno, M.D. Martin L. Reich, M.D. John E. Rossman, M.D. Stephen W. Rozan, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE (continued) John Salaki, M.D. Michael A. Samach, M.D. Felix Schletter, M.D. Zalman R. Schrader, M.D. Dean C. Shore, M.D. Leo H. Siegel, M.D. Lawrence Stein, M.D. James R. Sterrett, M.D. Jerrold M. Stock, M.D. John G. Valeri, M.D. Gary Weine, M.D. David Widman, M.D. Barry Zitomer, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professors

Michael Bernstein. M.D., New York Medical College, 1953

William F. Minogue. B.S., Seton Hall, 1951; M.S., New York Medical College. 1960

Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine

John J. Gregory. B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1953; M.D. , Albany, 1961

Associate Clinical Professor (Family Practice)

Donald F. Kent. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1935; M.D., 1940

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joel L. Duberstein. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Stephen J. Fischl. B.A., Seton Hall, 1963; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1967

MEDICINE 75

Robert A. Fuhrman. B.A., Clark, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966

Peter L. Goodluck. M.B., B.S., Medical College (Bombay), 1958

Mary T. Herald. B.A., New Rochelle, 1965; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1969 E. Thomas Holland. B.A., Wesleyan. 1971; M.D., Chicago, 1975 Thomas V. Inglesby. B.S., Mt. St. Mary's, 1959; M.D., Maryland. 1963 Waiiam A. Tansey III. B.A., Yale, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970 William N. Toth. B.S., Georgetown, 1956; M.D., Hahnemann. 1960 William E. Wagner, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1945; M.D., Columbia, 1950 Donald H. Wernsing. M.D., Hahnemann, 1975

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Samuel M. Gray, M.D. Richard M. Weinberg, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Kevin E. Bell, M.D. Joseph A. Belladonna, M.D. Fred G. Bromberg, M.D. Donald J. Brock, M.D. H. Oliver Brown, Jr., M.D. Kopel Burk, M.D. Andrew Coronato, Jr., M.D. H. William Diefendorf, M.D. Rosina B. Dixon, M.D. Charles E. Dooley, Jr., M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL \AED\CmE {continued)

John T. Parry, M.D. Robert B. Francis, M.D. Trina Frankel, M.D. Harvey Gerhard, M.D. A. Ralph Kristeller, M.D. Ines Linzmayer, M.D. Joseph G. Loeffler, M.D. Robert P. Margie, M.D. Lawrence J. Nastro, M.D. Sanford M. Reiss, M.D. Melvin Rubinstein, M.D. R. Gregory Sachs, M.D. Robert R. Springer, M.D. Elliott M. Stein, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE (continued)

Michael Suhl, M.D. Michael J. Tighe, M.D. Burton Tucker, M.D. David Allen Worth, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Joseph T. Faraldo, M.D. John R. Hanagan, M.D. Eugene R. Kelley, M.D. Michael B. Kemer, M.D. David P. Miller, M.D. Robert D. Slama, M.D. Steven J. Stanzione, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors

John F. Bertles. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1952 Robert B. Case. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Peter R. Holt. B.Sc, Tolington, 1949; M.B.. B.S., London, 1954 Gerald B. Phillips. B.A., Princeton, 1946; M.D., Harvard. 1948 William Rosner. B.A., Wisconsin. 1954; M.D., Albert Einstein. 1961 Theodore Van Itallie. B.S., Harvard 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1945 Harvey J. Weiss. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professors of Clinical Medicine

A. L. Loomis Bell. B.S., Wesleyan, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947

William S. Clark. B.S., Dayton, 1934; M.D, St. Louis, 1938

Stanley Cortell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1957; M.D., Tufts, 1961

Michael H. Grieco. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D.. State University of New York

(Downstate), 1957 Harvey G. Kemp. B.A., Oklahoma, 1955; M.D.. Johns Hopkins, 1959 Richard N. Pierson, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1966 Miles J. Schwartz. B.S., Queens (New York), 1947; M.D., New York University. 1961

Clinical Professors

Albert W. Grokoest. Philip H. Henneman. Henry C. Schaffeld.

B.S., Hamilton, 1940; M.D., Columbia, 1943 B.A., Harvard. 1943; M.D., 1946 B.A.. Columbia, 1938; M.D. , 1941

76 MEDICINE

Associate Professor

F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer. B.A., Oberlin, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Associate Professors of Clinical Medicine

C. Redington Barrett. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Robert S. Bernstein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., Harvard, 1965

Edward M. Dwyer. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Marianne J. Legato. B.A., Manhattanville, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1962

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard P. Ames. B.A., Williams, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Albert Attia. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.D., 1958

Norman A. Cagin. B.S., Rutgers, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

George Dermksian. M.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

James B. Gabriel. B.A., Brown, 1945; M.D., Harvard, 1949

Jonas M. Goldstone. B.S., Harvard, 1951; M.D., 1955

Saul Kaplan. B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., Tennessee, 1959

Arthur Karanas. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1958 Arthur J. Lennon. B.A., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Richard McCray. B.A., Wesleyan, 1954; B.D., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Myron C. Patterson. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1943 Bruce H. Pinkernell. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1960; M.D., 1964 Norton S. Rosensweig. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961 Lawrence Scharer. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958 Gerald Weintraub. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., 1954 Myron C. Wright. B.A., Dartmouth, 1937; M.D., New York University, 1940 Herman Ziffer. B.A., Brooklyn, 1949; M.D., Chicago, 1953

Research Scientists

Beatrice Fairchild. B.A., Hunter, 1942; M.A., Bryn Mawr, 1943; Ph.D., 1948 Henry Koopmans. B.A., Harvard, 1966; Ph.D., California (San Diego), 1972

Assistant Professors

Judith S. Hochman. M.A., Harvard, 1974; M.D., 1977 Donald Philip Kotler. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973

Michelle P. Warren (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Medicine

Judith Axelrod. B.A., Wellesley, 1963; M.D., Cornell, 1967

Bertha Ann Bauer. B.A., Smith, 1973; M.D., Columbia, 1977

Norma M. T. W. Braun. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Jeffrey M. Brensilver. M.D., Columbia, 1971

Richard Gunnar Carlson. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Edward W. Colt. M.D.', University College Hospital (London), 1 962

Ann Geller. M.A., Oxford, 1957; M.D., University College Hospital (London), 1960

Gregg Armin Husk. B.S., Chicago, 1970; M.D., 1975

Michael Lange. M.D., Toronto, 1968

MEDICINE 77

Gertrude Scott Lefavour. B.A., Gaucher, 1965; M.D., Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1970 Jonathan A. Lorch. B.A., Wisconsin, 1968; M.D., Tulane, 1972 Allen Mogtader. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1970 Jean W. Saleh. B.A., St. Joseph (Beirut), 1957; M.D., Faculte Francaise de Medicin, 1964 Seiichi Shimomura. M.D., Okayama (Japan), 1945

Assistant Clinical Professors

Charles G. Adsit, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1938; M.D., Columbia, 1942

Kenneth A. Altman. B.A., Cornell, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Wendy Aronson. B.A., Vassar, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1968

William J. Athos. B.A., Columbia, 1942; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1956 Harvey Benovitz. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Robert Bernot. B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Buffalo, 1960 Carlton Boxhill. B.A., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1968 Earl B. Brown. B.S., Emory, 1938; M.D., 1942 Richard Collens. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; M.D., New York

Medical College, 1966 Donald P. Dallas. B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1954

Robert K. Emy. B.A., New York University 1952; M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1957 James A. Feltman. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1944 Richard P. Fried. B.A., Brown, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1968 Oscar Garfein. B.A., Columbia, 1961; M.D., 1965 Zane Gaut. B.S., Birmingham Southern, 1950; M.D., Tulane, 1954 Richard Geltman. B.A., Rutgers, 1967; M.D.. Albert Einstein, 1971 Henry M. Greenberg. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1961; M.D., Tufts, 1968 Joseph A. Grossman. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1953; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1957 Katherine A. Hawkins. B.A., Manhattanville, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1973 Julian B. Hyman. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1947 John H. Keating. B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.D., 1943 Annetta J. Kimball. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1968 Ronald Kraft. B.S., Michigan, 1966; M.D., Cincinnati, 1970 Edith Joan Langner. B.A., Michigan, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1969 Sharon Lewin. M.D., Toronto, 1975

Robert P. Lombardo. B.S., Notre Dame, 1966; M.D., New York Medical College, 1970 Athanasius Mallios. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1973 David K. Meriney. B.A., Duke, 1956; M.D., 1960 Lawson A. Moyer 111. B.A., Virginia, 1968; M.D., 1972 William M. Nicholas. B.A., Williams, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Syracuse),

1954 Paul Martin Nonkin. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., New York Medical College,

1954 John J. Olichney. B.S., Rutgers, 1965; M.D., Albany, 1969 Anthony J. Pepe. B.S., St. John s (New York), 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Edward H. Reisner. B.A., Columbia, 1935; M.D., 1939 Robert B. Roven. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957 Eugene Santilli. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1958; M.D., Medical University of

Bologna, 1964 Morton Schwimmer. B.A., Lafayette (Pennsylvania), 1948; M.D., Jefferson, 1951 Kenneth N. Weinstein. B.A., Vermont, 1955; M.D., New York University, 1959

78 MEDICINE MICROBIOLOGY

Associate Research Scientists

Mukul Kumar Basu. B.S., Calcutta, 1961; M.S., Kalyani, 1963; Ph.D., Jadavpur, 1969 Thalia Boussios. B.S., Columbia, 1965; M.S., New York University, 1977; Ph.D., 1978 M. Saeed Khan. M.S., Brown, 1964; Ph.D., Imperial College of Science and Technology

(London), 1966 Bruce R. Lages. B.S., Stevens Institute of Technology, 1964; M.S., 1967; Ph.D., 1972 Mohan Muthireval Reddy. B.Sc, Agricultural College (India), 1963; M.Sc, Indian Agricul- tural Research Institute, 1966; Ph.D., Chicago, 1969

LECTURERS

David Schwimmer, M.D.

Carol Wilkinson, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Jose L. Barbosa-Saldivar, M.D. Michael Borecky, M.D. John Thomas Cappadona, M.D, David Stewart Carroll, M.D. Paul Chrzanowski, M.D. Albert Cohen, M.D. John Cornwall, M.D. James Ducey, M.D. Jeanne Fastook, M.D. DoneJd R. Fishman, M.D. Martin Jay Frankel, M.D. Eugene Freundlich, M.D. Francis G. Geer, M.D. Maurice F. Goodbody, M.D. Carolyn E. Goodstein, M.D. Barry E. Goozner, M.D. Antoine C. Harovas, M.D. William S. Hopewell, M.D. Michael Robinson Irwin, M.D. Herbert Ivan Jernow, M.D. Thomas C. Moore III, M.D. Thomas M. Nail, M.D. Norman C. Peeler, M.D. Mark V. Sherrid, M.D.

Microbiology

John E. Borne Professor and Chairman

Harold S. Ginsberg. B.A., Duke, 1937; M.D, Tulane, 1941

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE {continued)

Nicholas Steiner, M.D. Thomas Tamlyn, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Eric Andreae, M.D. Vernon G. Baker, M.D. Lestrino C. Baquiran, M.D. Michael S. Baum, M.D. Cecil B. Broderick, M.D. Daniel L. Brook, M.D. John Cohn, M.D. Hugh C. Davidson, M.D. Luziano Del Guzzo, M.D. Margaret Dessau, M.D. William E. Edelheit, M.D. Jerome Paul Ehrlich, M.D. Loellen Kay English, M.D. Jason Faller, M.D. James W. Fingerhut, M.D. Stuart W. Forster, M.D. Dennis Gage, M.D. Dulaney Glen, M.D. Andrew Milton Goldmann, M. Karl R. Hoffmann, M.D. Peter L. Hofmann, M.D. Wade A. Johnson, M.D. Mitchell Kahn, M.D. Martin Philip Kasofsky, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE {continued)

Andrew C. Leifer, M.D. Madeline Zetce Luke, M.D. Robert Allen Meyers, M.D. Alfred Miller, M.D. Lazare Novack, M.D. Mary Margaret O'Sullivan, M.D. Martin Saul Pine, M.D. David M. Puro, M.D. Ernest C. Richards, M.D. Thomas D. Robinson, M.D. Harry A. Roselle, M.D. Howard N. Schwartz, M.D. Michael S. Siegal, M.D. Thomas V. Tupper, M.D. Daniel C. Williams, M.D. Michelle L. Winter, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Dennis George Huskins, M.D. Robert Stanley Karol, M.D. Vineet Mehta, M.B., B.S. Richard R. Neufield, M.D. D. Mary E. O'Brien, M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Hisham F. Nakshbendi, B.S. Jack Wang, M.S. Mei-Uih Yang, M.D.

Professors

Dickson D. Despommier (in Public Health). B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., Columbia,

1964; Ph.D., Notre Dame, 1967 Paul D. Ellner (also Pathology). B.S, Long Island, 1940; M.S., Southern California, 1952;

Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 Bernard F. Erlanger. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.A., New York

University, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1951 Gabriel C. Godman (also Pathology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D, 1944

MICROBIOLOGY 79

Elvin A. Rabat (also Human Genetics) (in Neurology). B.S., College of the City of New York,

1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937 Wladsylaw Manski (in Ophthalmology). M.PhiL, Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw, 1951 Benvenuto Pemis (also Medicine). M.D., Milan, 1947 Henry J. Vogel (in Pathology). B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D.,

1949

Professor of Oral Biology

Solon A. Ellison. B.S., Columbia, 1942; D.D.S., 1946; Ph.D., 1958

Adjunct Professors

Louis H. Muschel. B.S., New York University, 1936; M.A., Columbia, 1938; M.S., Yale, 1951; Ph.D., 1953

Associate Professors

Philip D. Alesandro (also Public Health). B.S., Rutgers, 1952; M.S., 1954; Ph.D., Chicago,

1958 Sherie L. Morrison. B.A., Stanford, 1963; Ph.D., 1966 Saul J. Silverstein. B.S., Cornell, 1968; Ph.D., Florida, 1971

Adjunct Associate Professor

Victor Bokkenheuser. M.D., Copenhagen, 1945

Research Scientists

Paul Fisher. B.A., Hunter, 1968; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974 Charles Hamish Stuart Young. B.A., Oxford 1966; Ph.D., 1969

Assistant Professors

Vincent Bonagura (also Pediatrics). B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975

William Cleveland. B.S., Columbia, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1975

David H. Figurski. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1969; Ph.D., Rochester, 1974

M. Suzanne Holmes Giannini (in Public Health). B.A., New York University, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974

Alexander D. Goldfarb. Diploma, Moscow State University, 1969; Ph.D., Weizmann Insti- tute (Israel), 1980

Christine A. Milcarek. B.S., Duquesne, 1968; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1972

Minh Chi Nguyen Huu (in Urology). M.Sc, Technical (West Berlin), 1975; Ph.D., Max-Planck Institut, 1977

Vincent Rancaniello. B.A., Cornell, 1974; Ph.D., Mt. Sinai, 1979

Howard Shuman. B.S., Massachusetts, 1974; Ph.D., Harvard, 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Yvonne A. Lue. Ph.D., Columbia, 1976

Harley Y. Tse. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1972; Ph.D., California (San Diego), 1977

Associate Research Scientists

Shih M. Chen. B.S., Tung Gai (Taiwan), 1969; M.S., Illinois State, 1973; M.A., Columbia,

1974; Ph.D., 1979 Norbert H. Wasserman. B.A., Bucharest, 1944; M.A., 1947; Ing.D., 1962

80 MICROBIOLOGY NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY

SPECIAL LECURERS STAFF ASSOCIATES

Charles L. Fox, Jr., M.D. Harriet Castleman, B.S.

Konrad C. Hsu, M.D. Leila Fisher, M.S.

Beatrice C. Seegal, M.D. Ulla Lindholm-Beauchamp, M.S.

LECTURER

Kathleen P. Mullinix, Ph.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Pathology

Angus C. Sampath. D.Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Professor

George A. Hashim (in Surgery). Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Neurological Surgery

Byron Stookey Professor and Chairman

Bennett M. Stein. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., McGill, 1955

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

James W. Correll. B.A., Brown, 1941; M.D, CorneU, 1944 Edgar M. Housepian. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953

Associate Professors

Joao Lubo Antunes. M.D., Lisbon, 1968

Kalmon Post. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York University, 1967

Associate Professors of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Peter W. Carmel. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960 James G. McMurtry III. B.A., Rice, 1953; M.D., Baylor, 1957 W. Jost Michelson. B.A., Harvard, 1959, M.D, Columbia, 1963 Donald Oliver Quest. B.S., Illinois, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurological Surgery

Ronald Brisman. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

George L. Becker. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1950; M.D., Hahnemann, 1954 Harvey R. Nova. B.A., Brooklyn, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY NEUROLOGY 81

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY David A. Kvam, M.D. Alfred A. Steinberger, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert W. Mackie. M.D., Long Island Medical College, 1944

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY Bruce Stephen Harris, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

James E. O. Hughes. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

Robert W. Schick (in Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

Neurology

Henry and Lucy Moses Professor and Chairman

Lewis P. Rowland. B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1948

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Darryl C. DeVivo (Sidney Carter Professor) (also Pediatrics). B.A., Amherst, 1959; M.D.,

Virginia, 1964 Salvatore DiMauro. M.D., Padova (Italy), 1963 Stanley Fahn (H. Houston Merritt Professor). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1955; M.D.,

California (San Francisco), 1 958 Arthur Karlin (also Biochemistry). B.A., Swarthmore, 1957; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1962 Robert F. Lovelace. B.S., London, 1953; M.R.C.P., 1958 Audrey S. Penn. B.A., Swarthmore, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 James H. Schwartz (also Physiology) (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.A.,

Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York University 1959; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1964 Earl A. Zimmerman. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1963

Professor of Microbiology and of Human Genetics and Development

Elvin A. Kabat. B.S, College of the City of New York, 1932; M.A., Columbia, 1934; Ph.D., 1937

Professor of Physiology

John P. Reuben. B.A., Grinnel, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; Ph.D., Florida, 1959

82 NEUROLOGY

Professors of Clinical Neurology

Abe Chutorian (also Pediatrics). B.A., Manitoba, 1959; M.A., 1950; B.S., 1952; M.D.,

1957 Arnold Gold (also Pediatrics). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Lausanne,

1950 Eli S. Goldensohn (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., George Washington, 1937; M.D., 1940 James F. Hammill. B.S., LaSalle, 1947; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1948 Niels L. Low (also Pediatrics). M.D., South Carolina, 1940

Jay P. Mohr (Sciarra Professor). B.A., Haverford, 1958; M.S., Virginia, 1963; M.D., 1963 Daniel Sciarra. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943

Associate Professors

Lucien J. Cote (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954 Claude P. J. Ghez (also Physiology). B.Sc, Geneva, 1960; M.D., Harvard, 1964 Willard Allen Hauser (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Western Reserve, 1958; M.D., St. Louis, 1962

Associate Professor of Neurochemistry

Hai Won Chang. B.A., Ewha (Seoul), 1950; M.A., Wellesley. 1955; Ph.D., Columbia, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Neurology

Timothy A. Pedley. B.A., Pomona, 1965; M.D., Yale, 1969

C. Dominique Toran-Allerand (in the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduc- tion). B.A., Smith, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert E. Barrett. B.A., William and Mary, 1953; M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1957

Robert A. deNapoli. M.D., Harvard, 1954

Linda D. Lewis. B.S., Bethany, 1961; M.D., West Virginia, 1965

Joseph L. O'Brien. M.D., Cornell, 1950

Assistant Professors

Gary Abrams. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1970; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1974

Arnold Eggers. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971

Ronald Emerson (also Pediatrics). B.S., Bates, 1971; M.D., New York University, 1975

Daniel J. Goldberg (also Pharmacology). Ph.D., Yale, 1974

William G. Johnson. B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Columbia, 1967

Norman Latov. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1975; Ph.D., 1975

William A. Maltese. B.S., St. Francis (New York), 1972; Ph.D., Syracuse, 1977

Gajanan Nilaver. P.U.C, Madras, 1963; M.B., B.S., 1968

Stephen Shafer (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D.,

Columbia, 1970; M.P.H., 1977 Joseph H. Willner. B.A., Hamilton, 1966; M.D., New York University, 1970

Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Halina Den. B.S., Frankfort (Germany), 1949; M.S., New York University, 1954; Ph.D., Michigan, 1958

NEUROLOGY 83

Assistant Professor of Neurobiology

Eli Shapiro. B.S., Columbia, 1970; M.Phii, Yale, 1972; Ph.D., 1976

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Frank Boschenstcin. B.A., Toronto, 1950; M.D., 1954 Michael Fetell. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972 Mathew E. Fink. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1972; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1976 Ram Kairam. M.B.B.S., Andhra (India), 1970 Theodore A. List. B.A., Kalamazoo, 1963; M.D., Michigan, 1967 Richard Mayeux. B.S., Oklahoma State, 1968; M.D., 1972 James R. Miller. B.A., Amherst, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Marcelo Olarte. B.S., Marist Brothers, 1962; M.D., Cuyo, 1970 Stanley R. Resor, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1972

Roger Traub. B.A., Princeton, 1967; Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1972

Assistant Clinical Professors

Robert A. Esser. B.S., Loyola, 1941; M.D., Northwestern, 1945

Eugenia E. Gamboa. B.A., Philippines, 1961; M.D., 1966

Mark W. Green. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1971; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Stanley W. Holstein. B.S., George Washington, 1963; M.D., Georgetown, 1967

Charles R. Plank. B.A., Oklahoma, 1961; M.D., 1965

Jerome S. Resnick. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1955; M.D., 1959

Kuldip P. Sachdev. M.B., B.S., Agra (India), 1957; M.D., Punjab, 1962

SPECIAL LECTURES INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

Sara Ginsberg, Ph.D. NEUROLOGY

Harry Grundfest, Ph.D. Daniel A. Alkaitis, M.D.

Carmine T. Vicale, M.D. Louise Donahoe, M.D.

Damon N. Fellman, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURER Michael L. Gruber, M.D.

IN BIOCHEMISTRY Dale Joseph Lange, M.D.

David Nachmansohn, M.D. Gerald J. Smallberg, M.D.

LECTURERS ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

Robert E. McMasters, M.D. NEUROLOGY

Jeffrey Joel Rosen, Ph.D. Stephen C. Klass, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

NEUROLOGY Qu^ Valiquette, M.D.

Sidney M. Cohen, M.D.

James F. Culleton, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATES

Joyce Ilson, M.D. Ernest Bock, M.A.

Stanley Lesse, M.D. Angel Mozo, Ph.D.

May Ann Whelan, M.D. Bruce Roseman, M.D. Robert Wolf, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Clinical Professor

William Amols. B.A., New York University, 1938; M.D., 1942

84 NEUROLOGY OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lewis L. Hamilton. B.S., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Mary Ann Whelan, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Neurology

John C. M. Brust, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neurology

Alfred C. Bannerman. B.Sc, Edinburgh, 1963; M.B., Ch.B., 1966 Edward B. Healton. B.S., Oregon, 1964; M.D., Creighton, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professor

Bertel Bruun. M.D., Copenhagen, 1964

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Rafael Borras, M.D. Renee Malouf, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Carl W. Braun. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

Assistant Clinical Professors

Sidney E. Bender. M.D., Toronto, 1962

Neil Lombardi (also Pediatrics). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Donald G. Rawlinson, M.D.

Obstetrics and Gynecology

Professor and Acting Chairman

Allan G. Rosenfeld (also Public Health) (Director, Center for Population and Family Health). B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Harvard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Miecyslaw Finster (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Gymnasium (Poland), 1941; M.D., Geneva,

1957 Georgiana Jagiello (Virgil Damon Professor) (also Human Genetics). B.A., Boston, 1949;

M.D., Tufts, 1955

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 85

L. Stanley James (also Pediatrics). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948

Orlando J. Miller (also Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Yale, 1945; M.D., 1950

Professor of Biochemistry

Seymour Lieberman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1936; M.S., Illinois, 1937; Ph.D., Stanford, 1941

Professor of Reproductive Biochemistry

Ines Mandl. Ph.D., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1949

Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Henry Clay Frick II. M.D., Columbia, 1944

W. Duane Todd. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Associate Professor

Roy H. Petrie. B.S., Western Kentucky, 1961; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1965

Associate Professor of Physiology

Michel Ferin. M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1964

Associate Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Bruce A. Barron. B.A., Allegheny, 1955; Ph.D., Yale, 1965; M.D., New York University,

1971 Edward T. Bowe. B.S., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

Harold E. Fox (also Pediatrics). M.Sc, Rochester and Oxford, 1972; M.D., Rochester, 1972 Wylie C. Hcmbrce III (also Medicine). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1960; M.D., Washington (St. Louis),

1964

Associate Clinical Professors

Vincent J. Freda. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York University 1952 Raymond M. McCaffrey. B.A., Fordham, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958 David B. Moore. B.S., Hamilton, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1944 Ming-Neng Yeh. M.D., National Taiwan, 1964

Assistant Professors

Laxmi Baxi. M.D., Seth G. S. Medical College (Bombay), 1962

Phyllis C. Leppert (also Pediatrics). M.S., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Yale, 1976

Michelle P. Warren. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Deborah Jean Hales (in the Center for Population and Family Health). B.A., California

(Berkeley), 1973; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1977 Nabil Wafik Husami. B.S., M.D., American (Beirut), 1972 John Milton Hutson. B.S., Alabama, 1972; M.D., 1975 Raphael Jewelewicz. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1960 Richard U. Levine. B.S, Tufts, 1962; M.D., Cornell, 1966 Kevin B. Reilly. B.S., Fairfield (Connecticut), 1965; M.D., Michigan, 1965

86 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professor

Wolfgang Tretter. M.D., Heidelberg, 1952

Associate Research Scientists

Marian J. Evinger. B.S., Georgia, 1973; Ph.D., Washington (Seattle), 1978 Norma J. Greenfield. B.A., Queens (New York), 1964; Ph.D., Brandeis, 1969 Laura Ponticorvo. B.A., Columbia, 1943; Ph.D., 1968 Dean Van Vugt. B.S., Calvin (Michigan), 1976; Ph.D., Michigan State, 1981

SPECIAL LECTURERS INSTRUCTOR

Equinn Munnell, M.D. Sadaomi Imamura, M.D.

Gilbert J. Vosburgh, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL LECTURERS OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Richard A. Bronson, M.D. Sylvia P. Rubin, M.Sc.

i^'T^M \P°'f "' ^Pr^. ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

Arnold IN . henton, M.U. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

John L Lewis, Jr M.D. ,„3 N. Cholst, M.D.

Kevin p. ReiUy M D^ Steven G. Kaali, M.D.

David L Rosen eld, M.D. ^ ^ Sellner, M.D.

Sidney J. Siegel, MB. B^^j,^^^ E Shortell, M.D.

Anna L. Southam, N D^ Steven Swersky, M.D.

Christopher Tietze, M.D. p^^^,^ j ^-^^pp^^^ ^ p.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL Leonardo J. Yunis, M.D.

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Andrew L. Loucopoulos, M.D. Elynne B. Margulis, M.D. Lawrence J. Severino, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Douglas H. Bams. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954 Balazs Selendy. M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1964

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Mark E. Heller, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Solan Chao. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Hiroko T. Felton. M.D., Kansai (Japan), 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Stephen L. Matseoane. B.S., Fort Hare (South Africa), 1954; M.D., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1959

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY 87

Assistant Professor

Keith L. Rawlinson. B.S., M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1966

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Sunthorn Bunyaviroch. B.S., Chulalongkom (Thailand), 1960; M.D., Siriraj Hospital, 1964

Young Sook Cho. M.B., Yonsei, 1955; M.D., 1959

Nomenida A. Lazaro. B.S., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1960; M.D., 1965

Jack E. Maidman. B.S., California (San Francisco), 1958; M.D., 1962

Meredith F. Sirmans. B.S., Lincoln, 1961; M.D., Meharry, 1965

Esther S. Suarez. A. A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1955; M.D., 1960

Alfred J. Williams. B.A., Howard, 1960; M.D., Meharry, 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Vicki Ann Alexander. B.S., California (Riverside), 1963; M.D., California (San Francisco),

1974 Pisan Unchalipongse. M.D., Chiengma Medical School (Thailand), 1965

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ y^^

Sitaram Vithal Chitnis, M.D. Rajasingham Rahulatharan, M.D.

Hasi Das, M.D. Violeta Valdez, M.D.

Machelle Alma Harris, M.D. ?etex Wright 111, M.D. Margaret Lucey, M.S.

Monica C. Martin, M.D. ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL

Ashalatha Mital, M.B., B.S. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Thomas Murray, M.D. Angela M. Portale, M.S.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Abraham Risk. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1957; M.P.H, Johns Hopkins, 1969

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor

Robert S. Neuwirth (F. Huntington and Dorothy Babcock Professor). B.S., Yale, 1955; M.D., 1958

Professor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Harold M. M. Tovell. B.A., Toronto, 1951; M.D., 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Hussein K. Amin. M.B., Ch.B., Alexandria (Egypt), 1955

Assistant Professors

Jen-Ta Shen. M.D., National Taiwan, 1970; Ph.D., California (San Francisco), 1975 Michelle P. Warren (also Medicine). B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1961; M.D., Cornell, 1965

88 OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY OPHTHALMOLOGY

Assistant Professor of Endocrine Biochemistry

Richard B. Hochberg. Ph.D., Hahnemann, 1967

Assistant Professors of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology

Ernst G. Bartsich. M.D., Frankfort, 1962

Terusada Horiguchi. M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1961

Hamid Mootabar. M.D., Pahlavi (Iran), 1966; M.P.H., Columbia, 1974

Haldar H. Shamsi. M.B., B.S., King Edward Medical College (Pakistan), 1965

Ivan K. Strausz. M.B., Ch.B., Cape Town, 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Alexander Coman. M.D., Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1948

David B. Crawford. B.S., North Carolina, 1943; M.D., New York University, 1946

Emmanuel M. Greenberg. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1941

Ivan J. Jacobson. B.A., Belgrade (Yugoslavia), 1948; M.D., 1955

Gyula Nemes. B.A., Gymn. Szekesfehervar, 1946; M.D., Budapest, 1954

Marcia L. Storch. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1 955; M.D., Woman 's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1973 Ian G. Van Praagh. M.D., Toronto, 1955 Riley W. Waller. B.S., LeMoyne, 1943; M.D., Howard, 1947

Senior Research Associate

Muriel Feigelson. Ph.D., New York University, 1961

LECTURERS

Naif K. Basile, M.D.

Charles H. Debrovner,

M.D. Michael Harel, M.D. Roger Hassid, M.D. Mamdouh Moukhtar, M.D. Andre Nehorayoff, M.D. Robert M. Podell, M.D. Richard A. Ruskin, M.D. Fouad Surur, M.B., B.Ch. Alois Vasicka, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Bernardo Handszer, M.D. Daniel A. Tsin, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Terry L. Andrews, M.D. Felipe Bozzo, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Kok Chung Chang, M.D. Frederick Clare, M.D. Paul S. Colcher, M.D. Gerard de Catalogne, M.D. Satwant Kaur Dhamoon,

M.R.C.O.G. Balinas Espinosa, M.D. Rauf G. Faroqui, M.B., B.S. Paul Filipescu, M.D. Henry Freuman, M.D. Stephen Golub, M.D. Nargess A. Hakimi-Fard,

M.D. John Jakus, M.D. Jay Joel Kelinson, M.D. Stylianos Keranakis, M.D. E. Nicholas Klein, M.D. Gary M. Levine, M.D. Leon Lewenstein, M.D. Peter S. Maran, M.D. Ezatolah Mohajer-Shojai,

M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Alan Morris, M.D. Adamandia Panayotopoulos,

M.D. Benu Pascariu, M.D. Sujana K. Patibandla, M.D. Humberto Portillo, M.D. Meera Prabat, M.B., B.S. George S. Radney, M.D. Raphael Reiss, M.D. Ronald J. Reiss, M.D. Irving Ward Robinson, M.D. Arnold Roufa, M.D. Peter S. Sailon, M.D. Istvan Paul Tornai, M.D. Filippo Vita, M.D. Olwen Joy Wellington, M.B.,

B.S. Mary E. Wilson, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY

Malca Sane, M.D.

Ophthalmology

Edward S. Harkness Professor and Chairman

Charles J. Campbell. M.D., George Washington, 1948; B.S., Muskingum, 1949; M.S., Rochester, 1951; Med.Sc.D., Columbia, 1957

OPHTHALMOLOGY 89

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Endre A. Balazs (Malcolm P. Aldrich Professor). M.D., Budapest, 1942 Peter Gouras. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1951; M.D., 1955

Professor of Ocular Physiology

Laszlo Z. Bito. B.A., Bard, 1959; Ph.D., Columbia, 1963

Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

Abraham Spector. Ph.D., New York University, 1957

Professor of Microbiology

Wladyslaw Manski. M.Phil., Warsaw, 1939; D.Sc, Wroclaw (Poland), 1951

Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Harold F. Spalter. B.A., Brown, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Clinical Professor

Anthony Donn. B.S., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Associate Professor of Physiology

Jorge Fischbarg. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago, 1971

Associate Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Myles M. Behrens. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Richard W. Darrell. B.A., Harvard, 1955; M.D., 1959; Sc.D., Columbia, 1965 Andrew deRoetth, Jr. B.S., Northwestern, 1943; M.D., 1946 R. Linsy Farris. M.D., Duke, 1961 Max Forbes. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Chicago, 1957 Francis A. L'Esperance, Jr. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1956 Sally Moore (Orthoptics). B.S., Delaware, 1952 Balachandran D. Srinivasan. Ph.D., Columbia, 1964; M.D., 1967

Stephen Trokel. B.A., Cornell, 1954; M.S., Rochester, 1956; M.D., 1959; Med.Sci.D., Columbia, 1965

Associate Clinical Professors

William C. Cooper. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 John W. Espy. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1956 Frank B. Hoefle. B.A., Dartmouth, 1957; M.D., Harvard, 1961 George M. Howard. B.A., Dartmouth, 1952; M.D., Albany, 1959

Assistant Professor of Biophysical Ophthalmology

Charles J. Koester. B.S., Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1950; Ph.D., Rochester, 1955

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Biochemistry

James P. Dillon. B.S., Canisious, 1964; M.S., Columbia, 1973; Ph.D., 1974

90 OPHTHALMOLOGY

Assistant Professor of Ophthalmic Pharmacology

Prasad S. Kulkami. B.S., Sbivaji (India), 1965; M.S., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971; Ph.D., 1974

Assistant Professor of Pathology

Merlin D. Marquardt. B.S., Wisconsin, 1967; M.D., 1971

Assistant Professor of Radiation Biology

Basil V. Worgul. B.S., Miami (Florida), 1969; Ph.D., Vermont, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Ophthalmology

Lisa G. Barbera. B.S., Vassar, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976

Arnold W. Forrest. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., New York University, 1942

Emil Wirostko. B.S., Fordham, 1956; M.D., Cornell, 1960; Sc.D., Columbia, 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Hugh M. Moss. B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1954 Ellen F. Regan. B.A., Wellesley, 1940; M.D., Yale, 1943

SPECIAL LECTURERS ASSOCIATES {continued)

Frank M. Carroll, M.D. William A. James, Jr., M.D.

George R. Merriam, M.D. Rainer N. Mittl, M.D.

SPECIAL LECTURERS IN BIOCHEMISTRY INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

Zacharias Dische, M.D. OPHTHALMOLOGY

Karl Meyer, M.D. Martin L. Leib, M.D.

Lawrence G. Pape, M.D.

LECTURERS Louis D. Pizzarello, M.D.

Frederic H. Deutsch, Ph.D. Jaime Santamaria III, M.D. Frank Di Benedetto, Ph.D.

Hampson S. Sisler, Ph.D. RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

Mark D. Stern, M.D. Gerard Armand, Ph.D.

Julius A. Vida, Ph.D. Mary T. Flood, B.S.

William H. Garner, Ph.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL James E. Haley, Ph.D.

OPHTHALMOLOGY L^.Ku Li, Ph.D.

Richard D. Banyard, M.D. Larry Liebovitch

Donald H. Green, M.D. Jong J. Lim, Ph.D.

Richard G. Lennon, M.D. Kasimierz Malinowski, Ph.D. Cynthia Mackay, M.D.

Lance D. Redler, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATES

Roger A. Baroody, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL Janet L. Denlinger, M.D. OPHTHALMOLOGY iveimuae., i.l^.

Howard M. Eggers, M.D. Albert J. Hofeldt, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Thomas A. Farell. B.A., Hamilton, 1957; M.D, McGill, 1961

OPHTHALMOLOGY ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY 91

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY Charles B. Deichman, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Assistant Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology

Herman C. Jordan. B.A., Colgate, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1964

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY Rajendra K. Bansal, M.B., B.S. Antonio M. Gonzalez, M.D. John P. Mitchell, M.D. Ram P. Tiwari, M.S.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professor

James C. Newton. B.S., Fordham, 1949; Ph.D., 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957

LECTURERS ASSISTANTS {continued]

Dennis Freilich, M.D. George Traykovski, M.D.

Edward L. Raab, M.D. Joseph Wynn Wesley, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL OPHTHALMOLOGY

John Eden, M.D.

OPHTHALMOLOGY

Ulises Arango, M.D.

Philip A. Bonanno, M.D. INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

Robert C. Delia Rocca, M.D. OPHTHALMOLOGY

Bruce M. Hyman, M.D. Louis V. Angioletti, Jr., M.D.

Richard S. Kochman, M.D. Chin Wing Chu, M.D.

Thomas O. Muldoon, M.D. Bernard J. Fowler, M.D.

Robert P. Newhouse, M.D. Charles Merker, M.D.

D. Paul Satya, M.B., B.S. Chalempong Sarakhun, M.D.

Morton H. Seelenfreund, M.D. Howard K. Weisberg, M.D.

Orthopedic Surgery

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery and Acting Chairman

Harold M. Dick. B.A., Princeton, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Nas Ser Eftekhar. M.D., Teheran, 1960

S. Ashby Grantham. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1952; M.D., 1955

Charles S. Neer II. B.A., Dartmouth, 1939; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1942

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Austin D. Johnson. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947

92 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Associate Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Stephen B. Doty. B.A., Rice, 1961; M.A., 1963; Ph.D., 1965

Associate Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George B. Ambrose. B.A., Columbia, 1940; M.D., 1943

Hugo A. Keim. B.S., St. Mary's (Minnesota), 1956; M.D., Loyola, 1960; M.S., Northwestern, 1966

Associate Clinical Professors

David L. Andrews. B.A., Williams, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

John R. Denton. B.S., U.S. Military Academy, 1960; M.D., Medical College of Alabama,

1967 Rosamond Kane. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Assistant Professors of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Howard A. Kieman, Jr. B.S., Holy Cross, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966 Christopher B. Michelson. B.A., Bowdoin, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Assistant Clinical Professors

Robert M. Reiss. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., 1959

James N. Worcester, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Assistant Professor of Orthopedic Biomechanics

Robert W. Pawluk. B.S., Columbia, 1974; M.B.A., 1977

SPECIAL LECTURERS INSTRUCTORS (continued)

C. Andrew L. Bassett, M.D. Stuart J. Fischer, M.D.

Frank E. Stinchfield, M.D. Richard E. Fleming, Jr., M.D.

James S. Kort, M.D. ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL Lawrence A. Lefkowitz, M.D.

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY c^ u t xx n \i t\

Stephen J. McUveen, M.U.

Louis U. Bigliani, M.D. Prancis X. Mendoza, M.D.

Peter N. Carbonara, M.D. Kelvin P. Rosenwasser, M.D.

Robert N. Dunn, M.D. David Price Roye, Jr., M.D.

Merle H. Katzman, M.D. Hervey S. Sicherman, M.D.

Harvey Orlin, M.D. William T. Stillwell, M.D.

Thomas D. Rodda, M.D. Ronald Tietjen, M.D.

Joseph E. Salvatore, M.D.

E. Baldwin Self, Jr., M.D. SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE

David M. Smith, M.D. George Tzitzikalakis, M.D.

Martin L. Sorger, M.D.

Joel D. Weinstein, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Sharon M. Mitchell, B.S.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

Steven Berkowitz, M.D. Michael J. Bronson, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Marvin L. Shelton. B.S., Howard, 1951; M.D., 1956

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY 93

Assistant Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Shearwood J. McClelland (in Surgery). B.A., Princeton, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1974

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Aaron M. Gold, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY William L. King, M.D. (in Surgery) Caleb F. Medley, Jr., M.D. (in Surgery)

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

George Van B. Cochran. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1956; Med.Sci.D., 1957

Associate Clinical Professor

Raphael K. Levine. B.A., Brandeis, 1961; M.D., Jefferson, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professor

Edward B. Leahey. B.A., Fordfiam, 1941; M.D., Georgetown, 1944

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Robert L. S. Boothe, M.D. Abraham S. Kovarsky, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY John W. Carmody, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Joseph W. Fielding. M.D., Toronto, 1946

Clinical Professor

Robert E. Zickel. B.A., Cornell, 1952; M.D., 1958

Assistant Clinical Professors

Vincent J. Fietti, Jr. B.A., Boston, 1968; M.D., 1972 Frederic E. Helbig. B.A., Brown, 1964; M.D., Boston, 1969 Tarek Hisham Mardam-Bey. M.D., American (Beirut), 1972 Ronald M. Match. B.A., Hofstra, 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957 Andrew H. Patterson. B.A., North Carolina, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958 George L. Unis. B.A., New York University, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry, 1975

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY William G. Hamilton, M.D. James C. Parkes II, M.D.

94 ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY OTOLARYNGOLOGY

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Richard J. Cea, M.D. Sanford A. Ratzan, M.D. Luther F. Warren, M.D. George J. Zambetti, Jr., M.D.

Otolaryngology

Professor and Chairman

Maxwell Abramson. B.A., Wesleyan, 1957; M.D., Union (Albany), 1961

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor

Juergen Tonndorf. M.D., Kiel (Germany), 1938; Ph.D., Heidelberg, 1945

Professors of Clinical Otolaryngology

Robert M. Hui. B.A., Southern California, 1943; M.D., 1946

Robin M. Rankow. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1935; D.D.S., Columbia, 1940; M.D., Rochester, 1951

Professor of Clinical Audiology and Speech Pathology

Thomas H. Fay. B.A., Florida, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1950; Ph.D., Illinois, 1958

Associate Professor

Andrew Blitzer (also Oral Surgery). B.A., Adelphi, 1966; D.D.S., Columbia, 1970; M.D, Mt. Sinai, 1973

Associate Professor of Auditory Biophysics

Shyam K. Khanna. B.Sc, Lucknow (India), 1951; D.R.E., St. Xavier's (Bombay), 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Frank D. Mignogna. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and

Dentistry, 1965 Lawrence Savetsky. B.A., New York University, 1951; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1955 Malcolm H. Schvey. B.A., Lehigh, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1950; M.D., Amsterdam, 1956

Associate Professor of Clinical Dentistry

Steven Roser (in Surgery). B.A., Middlebury, 1964; D.M.D., Harvard, 1968; M.D., 1972

Assistant Professor of Biochemical Otolaryngology

Cheng Chun Huang. B.S., Taiwan, 1963; M.S., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., Iowa, 1970

OTOLARYNGOLOGY PATHOLOGY 95

Assistant Professors of Clinical Otolaryngology

Soly Baredes. B.A., Columbia, 1972; M.D., 1976

Anthony Frederick Jahn. B.Sc, Toronto, 1969; M.Sc, 1970; M.D., 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

John D. Piro (Prosthetics). B.A., Fordham, 1943; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946 Raymond B. Strauss. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1950; Ph.D., Florida, 1956; M.D., Western Reserve, 1968

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

OTOLARYNGOLOGY p^^^^ ^ Westerhoff, M.D.

Vincent G. Caruso, M.D. Howard D. Zipper, M.D. Daniel J. Pender, M.D.

Nicholas D. Pontilena, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

William R. Richtmeier, M.D. Svetlana Kaufman, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Errol A. Thompson. M.B., University College (Dublin), 1936

Assistant Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology

Lee David Eisenberg (in Surgery). B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Clinical Professor

Ransford C. Newman (in Surgery). M.B., B.S., London, 1960; F.R.C.S., Edinburgh, 1968

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professor

John S. Lewis. M.D., Alberta (Canada), 1953

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

OTOLARYNGOLOGY Alan Jacobson, M.D.

Awny Aziz Abdou, M.B., Ch.B. Scott M. Kessler, M.D.

Arshad H. Amjad, M.D. jay Bong Lee, M.D.

Maria Aramburu, M.D. Pi-Tang Lin, M.D.

Neville W. Carmical, M.D. Mauriciu Ro'descu, M.D. James F. Grillo, M.D.

Pathology

Professor of Neuropathology and Acting Chairman

Phillip E. Duffy. B.A., Columbia, 1943; M.D, 1947

96 PATHOLOGY

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Richard Axel (also Biochemistry). B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1970

William A. Blanc. B.A., Geneva, 1940; M.D., 1947; Ph.D., 1952

Paul Ellner (also Microbiology). B.S., Long Island, 1940; M.S., Southern California, 1952;

Ph.D., Maryland, 1956 Cecilia M. Fenoglio. B.S., St. Elizabeth, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 Soldano Ferrone (in Surgery). M.D., Milan (Italy), 1964; Ph.D., 1971 Gabriel C. Godman (also Microbiology). B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Conrad L. Pirani. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Ralph M. Richart. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1954; M.D., Rochester, 1958 Virginia Tennyson (also Anatomy and Cell Biology). B.S., Pennsylvania State, 1946; M.S.,

Baylor, 1956; Ph.D., Columbia, 1960

Professor of Microbiology

Henry J. Vogel. B.S., London, 1939; M.S., New York University, 1941; Ph.D., 1949

Professor of Comparative Pathology

Ross M. Grey. D. V.M., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1945

Professor of Neuropathology

Leon Roizin (in Psychiatry). B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1936

Professor of Surgical Pathology

Luciano Ozzello. M.D., Turin, 1951

Adjunct Professors

S. Raymond Gambino. B.S., Antioch, 1948; M.D., Rochester, 1952

Robert V. Hutter. B.A., State University of New York (Syracuse), 1950; M.D., 1954; M.A.,

Yale, 1958 Harry L. loachim. M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Sidney Pestka. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961

Professors of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borck (in Radiology). B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weitzmann Institute (Israel), 1967 Austin D. Johnston (in Orthopedic Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1947 Nicole Suciu-Foca (in Surgery). B.S., Bucharest, 1959; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Professor of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Karl Perzin. B.A., Columbia, 1954; M.D., 1958

Clinical Professors

Pablo Rubinstein. M.D., Chile, 1962 Sheldon C. Sommers. M.D., Harvard, 1941

PATHOLOGY 97

Clinical Professor of Oral Pathology

Melvin N. Blake. B.S., Massachusetts, 1951; D.D.S., New York University, 1955

Adjunct Clinical Professor

Jan Vincent Johannesen. M.D., Bergen (Norway), 1966

Associate Professors

John J. Fenoglio, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Georgetown, 1969 John F. Nicholson (also Pediatrics). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1959

Associate Professor of Dentistry

David J. Zegarelli. B.A., Columbia, 1965; D.D.S., 1969

Associate Professors of Neuropathology

Lester M. Geller. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.A., Michigan State, 1948; Ph.D., New York

University, 1953 Mavis Kaufman (in Psychiatry). M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

Associate Professor of Clinical Neuropathology

Richard S. Defendini. B.A., Michigan, 1948; M.A., 1952; M.D., Rochester, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pathology

Thomas A. Blumenfeld. A. A., North Carolina, 1960; M.D., Tennessee, 1964

Arline D. Deitch (in Anatomy and Cell Biology). B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.A., Columbia,

1946; Ph.D., 1954 Reba M. Goodman. B.A., Indiana, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1953; Ph.D., 1956 Michael Pesce. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; Ph.D., 1971 Myron Tannenbaum (in Urology). B.S., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D.,

1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961

Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatric Pathology

H. Joachim Wigger. M.D., Hamburg, 1954

Adjunct Associate Professors

Ernest Baden. M.A., Sorbonne, 1946; D.D.S., New York University, 1950; M.D.. Geneva,

1962 M. Richard Pachter. M.D., Zurich, 1956 William Pollack. M.S., Rutgers, 1950; Ph.D., 1964 Robert R. Rickert. B.A., Michigan, 1958; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1962 John A. Terzakis. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., New York University 1961 Kaity Yannopoulos. M.D., Greece, 1954 Frederick T. Zugibe. B.S., St. Francis, 1951; M.S., Chicago, 1959; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Irwin A. Almenoff. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1952 Daniel W. Benninghoff. B.A., Yale, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Donald E. Brown. M.D., Harvard, 1943

98 PATHOLOGY

John M. Budinger. B.S., Northwestern, 1950; M.D., 1954

Robert L. Hirsch. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., 1951

David N. Silvers (also Dermatology). B.A., Haverford, 1964; M.D., Duke, 1968

Stanley Simbonis. B.S., Yale, 1953; M.D., 1957

Harold J. Sobel. B.A., Brooklyn, 1950; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1954

Richard L. Swarm. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1949; M.D., 1950

Ruth H. Vogel. Ph.D., New York University, 1958

Associate Clinical Professor of Neuropathology

Nicholas J. Willson (in Psychiatry). B.S., St. Peter's, 1959; M.D., Seton Hall, 1963

Adjunct Associate Clinical Professor

Majid Ali. M.B., B.S., Punjab (India), 1963

Assistant Professors

James S. Brassel. B.A., Holy Cross, 1968; M.D., Tufts, 1973

Jerome Owen Cantor. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1975

Christopher P. Crum. B.A., Virginia, 1970; M.D., 1974

Margaret M. Grimes. B.A., Rosemont (Pennsylvania), 1971; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1975 Stephen Keller. B.S., Pace, 1971; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Jay Lefkowitch. B.A., Clark, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976 Charles C. Marboe. B.A., Princeton, 1971; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1976 Merlin D. Marquardt (in Ophthalmology). B.S., Wisconsin, 1967; M.D., 1971 Ricardo Mesa-Tejada. B.S., Manhattan, 1964; M.D., Madrid, 1970 Armand F. Miranda. B.S., Columbia, 1969; Ph.D., 1973 Ah-Kau Ng. B.S., National Chung Hsing (Taiwan), 1969; M.A., State University of New

York (Plattsburg), 1972; Ph.D., Temple, 1975 Carlo Russo. M.D., Geneva, 1977 Janet Tannenbaum. B.A., Brandeis, 1969; M.Phil., Columbia, 1974; Ph.D., 1975

Assistant Professor of Dermatology

Carole Louise Berger. B.S., City College (New York), 1966; M.A., Columbia, 1971; M.S., 1974; Ed.D, 1976

Assistant Professors of Clinical Neuropathology

Herbert Barden. B.S., Brooklyn, 1952; M.S., New York University, 1960; Ph.D., 1964 Arthur P. Hays. B.A., Dartmouth, 1962; Med.Sci.D., 1963; M.D., Colorado, 1966

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pathology

E. Glenn Armstrong. B.S., Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1966; M.S., 1969; Ph.D., Mary- land, 1975

Margaret Collins. B.S, Fordham, 1972; M.D., Georgetown, 1977

Daniel J. Fink. B.S., Cornell, 1968; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1975; M.Phil., 1980

Seth Goldberg. 5.5., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1966; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1970

Gerda Nette. B.S., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., 1973

Mohamed Osman. D. V.M., Cairo, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1983

Philip Tomashefsky (in Urology). Ph.D., New York University, 1969

PATHOLOGY 99

Assistant Clinical Professors

Giles D. Allard. B.A., Montreal, 1944; M.D., Laval, 1950

Lucretia Allen. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1952 Stefan D. Epstein. B.A., Columbia, 1956; M.D., State University of New York (Buffalo),

1960 Hiroshi Nakazawa. Henry G. Shriever. Ralph W. Snyder.

M.D., Keio (Tokyo), 1958

B.A., Vermont, 1956; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960 B.S., McGill, 1951; M.D., 1953

Heldrun Zweitnig-Rotterdam. M.D., Munich, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professor of Neuropathology

Michael Kogan. B.A., Miami (Florida), 1964; B.S., 1967; Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1972

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Solange G. Abunassar. M.D., American (Beirut), 1968

Paul Bachner. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1963

Larry E. Douglass. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1959; M.D., Vanderbilt, 1960

Howard B. Goldstein. B.A., Colgate, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959

Arthur I. Hurvitz. D. V.M., Michigan State, 1964; Ph.D., California (Davis), 1967

Catherine Kambolis. M.D., Athens, 1955

Paul A. Krieger. B.S., City College (New York), 1967; M.D., New York Medical College,

1971 Richard A. McReynolds. M.S., Virginia, 1968; M.D., 1971 Basil Moumgis. M.D., Pittsburgh, 1949

Frederick Muschenheim. B.A., Howard, 1953; M.D.C.M., McGill, 1963 Robert D. Newman. B.S., California (Los Angeles), 1958; M.D., 1962 Joseph E. O'Brien. B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1961 Maria Shevchuk. B.A., Fordham, 1970; M.D., State University of New York (Syracuse),

1974

SPECIAL LECTURERS Lester R. Cahn, D.D.S. David Cowen, M.D. C. Zent Garber, M.D. Raffaele Lattes, M.D. Abner Wolf, M.D.

LECTURERS Michael Baden, M.D. Paul A. Brown, M.D. Hyman Donnenfeld, M.D. Frederick A. Jacobiec, M.D.

LECTURERS (continued) Janis F. Klavins, M.D. David Spain, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY

James W. Allen, M.D. Vivette D'Agati, M.D. Marguerite M. Duby, M.D. Ludmilla Olesnicky, M.D. Milagros Ona-Sarino, M.D. Monica C. Yang, M.D. Elena Zegarelli-Schmidt, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTOR

Julianne M. Byrne, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES David J. Pierson, M.S. Moshe Rosen, Ph.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Jerold G. Brett, M.A. Regina Haars Richard Kolberg, M.S.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Charles A. Ashley. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D, 1947; M.S., Illinois, 1951

100 PATHOLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professor

Harlan D. Alpem. B.S., Michigan, 1967; M.D., Chicago, 1971

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Charles A. Ellsworth, M.D. William B. Guiney, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Professor

Jack W. C. Hagstrom. B.A., Amherst, 1955; M.D., Cornell, 1959

Associate Clinical Professors

Prem Chauhan. F.Sc, Med., Punjab (India), 1942; M.D., Cornell, 1959 Carlos Navarro. B.S., National University (Mexico), 1947; M.D., 1955 Angus C. Sampath (in Microbiology). D.Sc, Strasbourg, 1966

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Edward Moskovic. M.D., Central (Madrid), 1956

Assistant Clinical Professors

Claude J. Neptune. M.D., Haiti, 1963

Helen M. S. Richards. M.S., B.S., Colombo (Sri Lanka), 1969

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Luritz C. Creque, M.D. Ranjit K. Sachdev, M.B., B.S. Louys Thomas, M.D.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

William David Dempster. Ph.D., Glasgow, 1979

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Marianne Wolff. B.A., Hunter, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Assistant Clinical Professor

Jerry Rothenberg. B.S., Tulane, 1960; M.D., Medical College of Georgia, 1964

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professor

Bernard M. Wagner. M.D., Hahnemann, 1946

PATHOLOGY 101

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Robert S. Galen. B.A., Boston, 1966; M.D., 1970; M.P.H., Columbia, 1972

Assistant Clinical Professors

Steven L. Goldberg. B.A., Kenyon, 1963; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1968 Anthony Marchand. B.A., Connecticut, 1966; M.D., Duke, 1970 Joel A. Roth. B.A., Brooklyn, 1964; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1968

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Frederick van Lente, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor

S. Raymond Gambino. B.S., Antioch, 1948; M.D., Rochester, 1952

Professor of Clinical Surgical Pathology

Stephen F. Ryan. B.S., Regis (Denver), 1957; M.D., Colorado, 1961

Associate Clinical Professors

John Y. Kiyasu. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1951; Ph.D., 1955 Artemis D. Nash. B.A., Smith, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953

Assistant Professor

Deng Fong Liau. M.Sc, McGill, 1968; Ph.D., 1971

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Derek Englander. M.D., Royal College (London), 1963

Assistant Clinical Professors

Lazarevic Bozidar. M.D., Belgrade, 1956

Kenneth F. Button. B.A., Indiana, 1966; M.D., 1970

Harold P. Gaetz. B.S., McGill, 1953; M.D., 1958

Martin Krumerman. B.S., New York University, 1961; M.D., 1965

Corazon Sian. A. A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1958; M.D., 1963

LECTURER INSTRUCTORS {continued)

David Spain, M.D. Pushpa Latha Kancherla, M.D.

Vijai Katatikorn, M.D. L^.?,?^,Sl?5^ '^ CLINICAL Rose-Sunitha Thayaparan, M.D.

PATHOLCXjY

Elizabeth Ames, M.D. Elena P. Banogon, M.D.

102 PEDIATRICS

Pediatrics

Reuben S. Carpentier Professor and Chairman

Michael Katz (also Public Health). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Dovmstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

R. Peter Altman (SchuUinger Professor of Pediatric Surgery) (also Surgery). B.A., Colgate,

1955; M.S., Rochester, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1961 Arthur D. Bloom (also Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., New

York University, 1960 Ralph Dell. B.A., Pomona, 1957; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961 Darryl C. De Vivo (also Neurology). B.A., Amherst, 1959; M.D., Virginia, 1964 Welton M. Gersony. B.A., Syracuse, 1954; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1958 L. Stanley James (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Otago (New Zealand), 1948 Robert B. Mellins. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1952 Sergio Piomelli. B.A., Liceo Sannazzaro (Naples), 1948; M.D., Naples, 1954 Michael R. Rosen (also Pharmacology). B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University of

New York (Downstate), 1964 Myron Winick (Williams Professor; Director, Institute of Human Nutrition). B.A., Columbia,

1951; M.S., Illinois, 1952; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956

Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Abe Chutorian (also Neurology). B.A., Manitoba, 1949; M.A., 1950; B.S., 1952; M.D.,

1957 Nicholas Cunningham (also Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins,

1955; Dr. PH., 1976 Arnold R. Gold (also Neurology). B.A., Texas, 1947; M.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Lausanne,

1950 Sylvia P. Griffiths. B.A., Hunter, 1944; M.D., Yale, 1948 Jerry C. Jacobs. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1956 Niels L. Low (also Neurology). M.D., South Carolina, 1940 David Shaffer (also Psychiatry). M.D., London, 1961 Anneliese L. Sitarz. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

H. Donald Dunton. M.D., Rochester, 1945

Clinical Professor of Pediatric Psychology

Michael Lewis. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1958; M.A., 1961; Ph.D., 1962

Associate Professors

Joseph Graziano (in Pharmacology). B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971 William C. Heird. B.S., Maryville, 1958; M.S, Vanderbih, 1963; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971 Allen I. Hyman (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1959

PEDIATRICS 103

Ehud Krongrad. M.D., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1965

Gilbert W. Mellin. B.S., Bethany, 1945; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

Akira Morishima. M.D., Keio (Japan), 1954; Ph.D., 1961

John F. Nicholson (also Pathology). B.A., Vanderbilt, 1955; M.D., 1959

Pedro Rosso (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D., Chile, 1966

Katherine Sprunt. B.A., WelJesley, 1942; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1945

S. Alex Stalcup. B.A., Whittier, 1967; M.D., California (Berkeley), 1971

Associate Professor of Pharmacology

Joseph Graziano. B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Russell S. Asnes. B.A., Boston, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1963

Stephen J. Atwood. B.A., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1972

Jennifer J. Bell. B.A., Swarthmore, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1961

William J. Davis. B.A., Wilkes, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

John M. Driscoll. B.A., Hamilton, 1958: M.D., Bowman-Gray, 1962

Harold E. Fox (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.Sc., Rochester and Oxford, 1972; M.D.,

Rochester, 1972 Allan Hordof. B.A., Hobart, 1962; M.D., New York University, 1966 Anthony Mansell. B.A., Princeton, 1961; M.D., Ohio State, 1965 Martin Nash. B.A., Duke, 1960; M.D., 1964 Jane Pitt. B.A., Radcliffe, 1960; M.D., 1964

Carl N. Steeg. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1962 Dorothy Warburton (in Human Genetics and Development). B.S., McGill, 1957; Ph.D.,

1961

Associate Clinical Professors

Fred Agre. B.A., Lafayette, 1957; M.D., Duke, 1961

Robert Appleby. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

William A. Bauman. B.S., Harvard, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Frederick Bomback. B.A., Brandeis, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1969

Constance J. Hayes. B.S., St. Rose, 1959; M.D., Loyola, 1965

John J. Kangos. B.S., Rutgers, 1945; M.D, Long Island College of Medicine, 1948

Michael Novogroder. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate),

1969 Tove S. Rosen. B.A., Rochester, 1961; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1965 Boris Rubinstein (also Psychiatry). B.A., Colegio Israelita (Mexico City), 1961; M.D.,

Nacional (Mexico), 1970; M.P.H, Harvard, 1974 Jack Shiller. B.A., North Carolina, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1952 Joseph A. Silverman. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

Arthur Green. B.A., Rochester, 1951; M.D, Amsterdam, 1955

Assistant Professors

Kwame Anyana-Yeboa. M.D., Ghana, 1972 Robyn Barst. B.A., Rochester, 1972; M.D., North Carolina, 1976

Fredrick Bierman. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1969; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1973

104 PEDIATRICS

Vincent Bonagura (also Microbiology). B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975

Dennis Davidson. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1970; M.D., Loyola Stritch School of Medicine, 1974

Catherine DriscoU. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1967; M.D., Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1974 Candace Jean Erickson. B.A., George Washington, 1969; M.D., Maryland, 1973 Ronald Emerson (also Neurology). B.S., Bates, 1971; M.D., New York University, 1975 James Garvin. B.A., Harvard, 1968; M.D., Jefferson, 1976 Gabriel G. Haddad. B.S., American (Beirut), 1969; M.D., 1972 Karen Hein. B.A., Wisconsin, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Sudha Kashyap. M.B., B.S., St. John 's (India), 1972 Phyllis C. Leppert (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.S., Columbia, 1964; M.D., Yale,

1976 Joseph S. Levy. M.D., Hadassah (Israel), 1971 Adrien Moessinger. M.D., Lausanne, 1971 Nigel Paneth (also Public Health) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D.,

Harvard, 1972; M.P.H, Columbia, 1978 Leila M. Pang (also Anesthesiology). B.A., Hawaii, 1966; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1970 Joan A. Regan. B.A., Mt. St. Vincent (New York), 1969; M.D., Missouri, 1974 Ulana Sanocka. B.S., Brooklyn, 1968; M.D., New York University, 1974 Karl F. Schulze. B.A., Carleton, 1961; M.D., Rochester, 1965 Robert L. Seigle. B.A., Northwestern, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974 Raymond I. Stark. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., 1970 Sten H. Vermund (also Public Health). B.A., Stanford, 1974; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1977;

M.Sc, D.P.H., London School of Tropical Medicine, 1981 Christine Ann Walsh. M.D., Yale, 1973

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Bernard R. Feldman. B.S., William and Mary, 1955; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1959 Charles H. Feldman. B.A., Columbia, 1966; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1970 William Gerba. B.S., Fordham, 1971; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974 Burton Grebin. B.A., Adelphi, 1962; M.D., New York Medical College, 1966 Sarmistha Bhaduri Hauger. B.S., Texas, 1972; M.D., Loyola Stritch, 1976 Donald E. Hutchings (also Psychiatry). B.A., Lake Forest, 1959; M.A., Chicago, 1963;

Ph.D., Columbia, 1965 Matilde Irigoyen. B.A., Buenos Aires, 1966; M.D., 1971 Ram Kairam (also Neurology). M.B.B.S., Andhra (India), 1970 Celia Ores. M.D., Berne (Switzerland), 1956

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rose G. Ames. B.A., Barnard, 1939; M.D., Columbia, 1944

Alexander Blum, Jr. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Harvard, 1947

Matilda B. Brust. B.A., Marietta, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956

Roger Challop. B.S., Brooklyn, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967

Yvonne T. DriscoU. B.A., Trinity, 1958; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1962 T. Donald Eisenstein. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1952; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1956 Jane Eliot Fried (in Psychiatry). B.A., Vassar, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Marguerite J. Gates. B.A., Barnard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954 Gustave Gavis. B.A., Indiana, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1952 Thurman B. Givan, Jr. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Stephen Glaser. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., New York University, 1964 Bertram H. Grossman. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Georgetown, 1959

PEDIATRICS 105

Jeannette J. Jansky (in Psychiatry). B.S., Illinois, 1949; M.S., College of the City of New York, 1960; Ph.D., Columbia, 1970

Kenneth H. Katz. B.A., Lafayette, 1968; M.D., New York Medical College, 1973

Murray D. Kuhr. B.S., Cincinnati, 1961; M.D., Chicago, 1965

Betty C. M. L. Kuo. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964

George Lazarus. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1971

Dean N. Martin. B.A., Hofstra, 1959; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1963

Harriet E. McGurk. B.A., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973

Daniel J. Melia. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Harriette R. Mogul. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1961; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1965

Damyanti Moorjani (also Rehabilitation Medicine). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant (Bom- bay), 1957

Stanley Morrison. B.A., Temple, 1963; M.D., George Washington, 1967

Herbert Poch. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.D., 1953

Morton H. Rachelson. B.A., Syracuse, 1946; M.D., Tulane, 1950

Margaret M. Rice. B.S., Marymount, 1943; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947

Roderick C. Richards. B.A., Cornell, 1945; M.D., 1948

Louis Rodrigues. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1959

John S. Rosmaita. B.A., St. Peter's, 1953; M.D., State University of New York, 1957

Malcolm S. Schwartz. D.O., College of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery, 1967

Edith M. J. Kuo-Ying Shen. M.D., Ludwig-Maximilian (Munich), 1960

Kung-Tso Sheng. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai), 1954

Elliot J. Siegel. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1954; M.D., 1968

Gilbert Simon. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Rochester, 1962

William H. Smith. B.A., Rochester, 1941; M.D., 1944

Susan Spear. B.A., Wellesley, 1968; M.D., Columbia, 1972

David Stiles. B.A., Harvard, 1940; M.D., 1943

Martin B. Vita. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., 1954

William W. Whitten. B.A., Wesleyan, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1947

David Wisotsky. B.S., City College (New York), 1970; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1974

Associate Research Scientists

Elizabeth Anisfeld. B.A., Toronto, 1960; M.A., McGill, 1961; Ph.D., 1964

David Evans. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.A., Northwestern, 1969; Ph.D., 1975

Helen L. E. Johnson. B.A., Clark, 1968; M.A., Wisconsin, 1972; Ph.D., 1972

Moshe J. L. Levison. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1965; Ph.D., Indiana, 1973

Rajasekhar Ramakrishnan. B.Tech., India Institute of Technology, 1968; M.S., Columbia,

1971; D.Eng.Sci., 1974 Carol Seaman. B.S., Southern California, 1964; M.S., New York University, 1977 Malathy Singh. B.S, Madras, 1961; M.S., Baroda, 1965; Ph.D., Delhi, 1970 Joyce Weil. B.S., Queens (New York), 1964; Ph.D., City University of New York, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

Edwin A. Goldstein. B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958

LECTURERS ASSOCIATES (continued) ASSOCIATES [continued)

Albert Aharon, M.D. Lilian Wah-Ying Chiu, M.D. Peter F. Migel, M.D.

Armond V. Mascia, M.D. Elaine Choy Lee, M.D. Robert M. Schwartz, M.D.

Yaakov Schechter, Ph.D. Maryann J. Colenda, M.D.

John L. Costa, M.D. IJl^nT^^^^'^^ "" ^^""^''^

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL Robert A Hands M D PEDIATRICS

PEDIATRICS Alan Kanter M D Martha L. Amarant, M.D.

Gaya Aranoff M.D. j^^ith Luskin, M.D. Dennis Brown, M.D.

Bruce J. Beeber, M.D. Larry Paul Dana, M.D.

106 PEDIATRICS

INSTRUCTORS {continued) Leslie Davidson, M.D. Michele Denize, M.D. Arlene Falk, M.D. Stanley H. Gilbert, Jr., M.D. Robert A. Hands, Jr., M.D. Patrick Hicks-Hartman, M.D. Martha Ellen Katz, M.D. Marie B. Keith, M.D. Rosemary Klenk, M.D. Michael L. Lapkin, M.D. Dorothy Levine, M.D. Neil Minikes, M.D. Sylvia Morgan, M.D. Morton J. Seligman, M.D. D. Loran Southern, M.D. Margaret Ann Stillman, M.D. Lynn Sugarman, M.D. Nicki Lynn Timko, M.D. Mary Versfelt, M.D. Tova Yellin, M.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Kuang Chung Hu Chien, M.D. Bernard Etra, M.D. Rosalinda Rubinstein, M.D. Susan Skalsky, M.D. Samuel T. Wilmit, M.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATES

Mysore Gandhi, M.S. Joel Lipset, M.A. Frank T. Nakamura, B.S. Yvonne Wasilewski, M.A.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Yelda Aksoy, M.S. Alia Bazzy-Asaad, M.D. Susan P. Brinkworth, M.A. Evelyn Davis, M.D. Richard T. Henrich, B.S. Kazim Husain, M.D.

ASSOCIATES {continued)

Young-Ihl Kim, M.D. Eli Koenig, M.D. Dorcas Koenisberger, M.S. Suhwe Lee, M.S. Gaines Mimms, M.D. Mary Judith Murphy, M.D. Molly L. Nozyce, M.A. Linda D. O'NeUl, M.S. Jim M. Quark, B.S. Eric L. Raisher, M.S. Robin Schwartz, M.S. Regina Spinazzola, M.D. Janice A. Stalcup, M.P.H. Mary E. Steir, M.S. Phyllis Taterka, M.S. Samuel Willinger, M.D. Paul Yellin, M.D. Christine L. Zucker, M.S.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Allan S. Cunningham. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Western Reserve, 1966

Assistant Clinical Professor

Joe H. Cannon. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1942; M.D., 1945

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS John G. Freehafer, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor

Margaret Heagerty. B.A., Seton Hall, 1957; B.S., West Virginia, 1959; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Wiener Leblanc. B.S., Haiti, 1950; M.D., 1956 , ,^„ ,„ ,

Gene-Ann Polk. B.A., Oberlin, 1948; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1952; M.P.H, Columbia, 1958

Assistant Professors

llene Fennoy. B.A., Stanford, 1968; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1973 Alan Bruce Zubrow. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1972; M.D., 1976

PEDIATRICS 107

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Araceli R. Ancajas. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1961

Josephine Kerr. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.D., New York University, 1951

Yusuf M. Khakoo. M.B., B.S., Bombay, 1962

Assistant Clinical Professors

David Bateman. B.A., Wooster, 1968; M.D., Tufts, 1973

Serge Fenelon. M.D., Lausanne, 1973

Vincent E. Hutchinson. M.B., B.S., West Indies, 1972

Cleveland Moore. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1971; M.D., Stanford, 1976

Muriel M. Petioni. B.S., Howard, 1934; M.D., 1937

Marguerita A. Silvera. B.S., Brooklyn, 1969; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1973

Maruthi Vadapalli. M.B., B.S., Andhra, 1967. D.CH., 1968

Claudina Y. Wallace. B.S., Howard, 1963; M.D., 1967

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PEDIATRICS

Beverly Anderson, M.D. Delores J. Gayle-Thompson, M.D. Anne Hutcheon. M.D. Robert Hutcheon, M.D. Carmen Martinez, M.D. Sheila Lynn Palevsky, M.D. Beverly A. Sheppard, M.D. Patricia A. Battle Thibou, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

Stephen Wang. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., 1964

Philip R. Ziring. B.A., New York University, 1958; M.D., 1962

Assistant Clinical Professors

William Chernack. B.A., Cornell, 1966; M.D., New York Medical College, 1970

Martin Lewis Cohen. M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1967

Ella Cummins. B.A., Smith, 1935; M.D., Albany, 1939

David E. Knoop. B.A., Harvard, 1958; M.D., Yale, 1962

Robert Kornblum. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1962 William Lupatkin. B.S., Columbia, 1965; M.S., 1966; Ph.D., 1970; M.D., Miami (Florida),

1974 Andrew Schenkman. M.D., Chile, 1976 Lawrence M. Skolnick. B.A., Queens (New York), 1968; M.D., New York University, 1972;

M.P.H., North Carolina, 1980 Harold Starkman. B.A., New York University, 1973; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1976

STAFF ASSOCIATE Niecee Singer, M.S.

108 PEDIATRICS

At Overlook Hospital

Associate Clinical Professors

Solomon J. Cohen. B.A., Cornell, 1944; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1951 Gloria Schrager. B.A., Brooklyn, 1944; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1948

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joseph I. Boylan. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Yale, 1955

Frederick C. Braun, Jr. B.S., Georgetown, 1951; M.D., Jefferson, 1955

Howard S. Britt. B.A., M.D., Boston, 1970

Burton M. Feinsmith. B.S., Arkansas, 1949; M.S., Florida, 1951; M.D., Berne, 1961

Benjamin H. Josephson. B.S., North Carolina, 1949; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

Joseph Kalbacher. B.S., Yale, 1944; M.D., Cornell, 1946

John H. Krikorian. B.A., Yale, 1958; M.D., Bowman-Gray, 1963

Carolkay Lissenden. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1959; M.D., Women 's Medical College of Pennsyl- vania, 1964

Lewis I. Sank. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1957; M.D., 1961

Steven A. Schlachter. B.S., St. Peter's (New Jersey), 1971; M.D., George Washington, 1971

Frederic A. Schulaner. B.S., Tufts, 1955; M.D., 1959

Margaret E. Symonds. M.B., London, 1941; B.S., 1945

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Alexander R. Horowitz, M.D.

Paul Avondoglio, M.D. Victor S. Lamberto, M.D.

Martin Diamond, M.D. yja^ q ^ghta, D.C.H.

Steven Halpern, M.D. Alice Merkrebs, M.D.

Paul A. Kearney, M.D. Bharati S. Mullick, M.D.

Barry Lauton, M.D. john Owen Percy, M.D.

Sandy P. Waran, M.D. Vinnakota V. P. Rao, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL P"^!^ A- ^.^^^-^^S, M.a

PEDIATRICS otanislawa Kosnowski, M.D.

Ghitta Eibschutz, M.D. Arvind P. Shah M^D.

Frank P. Frenda, M.D. James Sorger, M.D.

Carl H. Herman, M.D. John F. Vigorita, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Pediatrics

Louis Z. Cooper. B.S., Yale, 1954; M.D., 1957

Associate Professors of Clinical Pediatrics

Elena B. Klein. M.D., State Institute of Medicine and Pharmacy (Rumania), 1953; Ph.D.,

Institute of Microbiology (Rumania), 1972 Doris L. Wethers. B.S., Queens (New York), 1948; M.D., Yale, 1952

Associate Clinical Professor

Helen Rodriguez-Trias. B.S., Puerto Rico, 1957; M.D., 1960

PEDIATRICS PHARMACOLOGY 109

Assistant Professors of Clinical Pediatric Psychology

Madeline W. Appell. B.A., Queens (New York), 1962; M.A., 1963

Jeanne Brooks-Gunn. B.A., Connecticut College, 1969; Ed.M., Harvard, 1970; Ph.D., Pennsylvania, 1975

Assistant Clinical Professors

Dennis Allendorf. B.S., Georgetown, 1965; M.D., New York Medical College, 1970

Garth Alperstein. M.B., Ch.B., Cape Town, 1973

Anastasios Anastasiades. M.D., Athens, 1950

Robert Antar. B.S., Brooklyn, 1965; M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1970

Chaya Chakrabarti. B.Sc, Calcutta, 1963; M.D., 1969

Herbert I. Cohen. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1949

Ragabardial R. Dwarka. B.S., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1965; M.D., 1969

Joan M. Flanigan. B.A., Case Western Reserve, 1962; M.D., 1966

Diane Hochlerin. B.S., Brooklyn, 1962; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1966 Fadel M. Hochroth. B.A., Louisville, 1953; M.D., 1957 Harry Kimmel. B.A., St. Andrews (Bucharest), 1940; M.D., Bucharest, 1949 Katherine Lodyjensky. M.D., Montreal, 1943 Neil Lombardi (also Neurology). B.A., M.D., Boston, 1967 Monica Ruth Meyer. B.A., Radcliffe, 1967; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1973 Richard Mones. B.A., Brooklyn, 1967; M.D., New York Medical College, 1971 Farrokh Sharivar. M.D., Teheran, 1966 Shantha Subramaniam. M.B., B.S., Madras, 1962 Lucy M. Swift. B.A., Barnard, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Max P. Van Gilder. B.S., Tulane, 1967; M.D., 1971 Ranjeet Virdi. B.S., India, 1960; M.D., 1960 Elizabeth Watkins. B.A., Randolph-Macon Women's College, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

PEDIATRICS PEDIATRICS

Ricarda L. Baum, M.D. Carlos Emilio Arzeno, M.D.

Renata Frenkel, M.D. Luminita M. David, M.D.

Rodney L. Hite, M.D. Morel Duverseau, M.D.

Nancy Holahan, M.D. Christodoulos lordanou, M.D.

Thomas H. Hyatt, Jr., M.D. Martha Katz, M.D.

Ruth E. Kessler, M.D. Amelia Reyes, M.D.

Kusum Khanna, M.B., B.S. Melanie Rivenzon, M.D.

Priscilla W. Lewis, M.D. Orlando Ivan Sola-Gomez, Richard Gary Merkler, M.D. M.D.

Edward A. Nichols, M.D. Michael Glen Teitel, M.D.

Flora Ramirez, M.D. Steven Tsoutsouras, M.D. Brenda Harris Tynes, M.D. Thelma Verano-Santiago, M.D.

Pharmacology

David Hosack Professor and Chairman

Brian F. Hoffman. A.A., Princeton, 1943; M.D., Long Island College of Medicine, 1947

Professors

J. Thomas Bigger (also Medicine). B.A., Emory, 1955; M.D., Georgia, 1960 Frederick G. Hofmann. B.A., Michigan, 1943; Ph.D., Harvard, 1952

110 PHARMACOLOGY

Norman Kahn (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., Columbia, 1954; D.D.S., 1958; Ph.D.,

1964 Harold C. Neu (also Medicine). B.A., Creighton, 1956; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1960 Shi-Hsun Ngai (also Anesthesiology). M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1944 Michael R. Rosen (also Pediatrics). B.A., Wesleyan, 1960; M.D., State University of New

York (Downstate), 1964 Wilbur H. Sawyer (Gustavus and Louis Pfeiffer Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D.,

1945; Ph.D., 1950 Hsueh-Hwa Wang. M.D., National Central (Nanking), 1946 Andrew L. Wit. B.S., Bates, 1963; Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Adjunct Professors

Paul F. Cranefield. Ph.B., Wisconsin, 1946; Ph.D., 1951; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964

Peter K. T. Pang. B.Sc, Hong Kong 1964; M.S., Yale, 1968; Ph.D., 1970

Jurg Schneider. M.D., Basel (Switzerland), 1945

Sidney Spector (also Anesthesiology). B.S., Denver, 1948; M.S., 1950; Ph.D., Jefferson,

1956 Robert M. Weiss. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1957; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1960

Associate Professor

John Bilezikian (also Medicine). B.A., Harvard, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969

Associate Professor of Pediatrics

Joseph Graziano. B.S., Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Adjunct Associate Professors

Arthur Joel Blume. B.A., Rochester, 1963; M.S., Syracuse, 1966; Ph.D., 1968

Marvin R. Blumenthal. B.S., Michigan, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1949

Ira Cohen. B.A., Columbia, 1969; M.D., Ph.D., New York University, 1974

Assistant Professors

Kenneth Dangman. B.S., Bucknell, 1971; M.A., M.Phil., Columbia, 1974; Ph.D., 1977

Peter Danilo, Jr. Ph.D., Columbia, 1974

Pamela B. Garlick. B.A., Oxford 1973; Ph.D., 1979

Daniel J. Goldberg (also Neurology). Ph.D., Yale, 1974

Jaya Haldar. M.Sc, Calcutta, 1961; Ph.D., London, 1966

Douglas N. Ishii (in the Cancer Center). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1967; Ph.D., Stanford,

1974 Alan M. Jeffrey (also Public Health). B.S., Hull (England), 1966; Ph.D., University College of

North Wales, 1970 Lou Katz (in the Cancer Center). Ph.D., Wisconsin, 1959 Tuan Due Pham (also Anatomy and Cell Biology). B.S., St. Edward's (Texas), 1962; M.S.,

Loyola, 1967; M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia, 1975 Richard B. Robinson. Ph.D., Illinois, 1975 Steven A. Siegelbaum (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). Ph.D., Yale, 1978

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Edward B. Kirsten. B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., New York University, 1966; Ph.D., City College (New York), 1969

PHARMACOLOGY PHYSIOLOGY 111

Robert S. Sloviter. B.S., Drexel, 1973; Ph.D., Pennsylvania State, 1978 Lawrence Tilley. D. V.M., Iowa State, 1969

Adjunct Associate Research Scientist

Lance L. Simpson. B.A., Vanderbilt, 1966; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1969

LECTURER

Kwang Soo Loo, M.D.

ASSOCIATES

Penelope Altman Boyden, Ph.D.

Kenneth W. Hewett, Ph.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Truman R. Brown, Ph.D. Robert J. Hariman, M.D. Rosemary K. Pang, Ph.D.

ASSOCIATES [continued)

Samuel M. Ross, B.E.E. (Electrical

Engineering)

STAFF ASSOCIATES

William Eng, B.S.

Irina Golyakhovsky, Ph.D.

Arthur Hoffmeyer, B.S.

Iris Nemhauser, Ph.D.

Jorg Dietrich Schoenen, M.D.

Physiology

John C. Dalton Professor and Chairman

Samuel C. Silverstein. B.A., Dartmouth, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963

Professors

Qais Al-Awqati (also Medicine). M.B., Ch.B., Baghdad, 1962 Shu Chien. M.B., National Taiwan, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957 Eric R. Kandel (also Psychiatry). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Irving Kupferman (also Psychiatry). B.S., Florida, 1959; Ph.D., Chicago, 1964 William L. Nastuk. B.S, Rutgers, 1939; Ph.D., 1945 Mero Nocenti. B.A., West Virginia, 1951; M.S., 1952; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955 David Schachter. B.S., New York University, 1946; M.D., 1949

James H. Schwartz (also Neurology). B.S., Columbia, 1954; M.D., New York University, 1959; Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1964

Associate Professors

Martin Blank. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1954; Ph.D., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D.,

Cambridge, 1959 Raimond Emmers. B.A., East Texas Baptist, 1953; M.A., North Carolina, 1955; Ph.D.,

Syracuse, 1958 Michel Ferin (in Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Louvain (Belgium), 1964 Jorge Fischbarg (in Ophthalmology). M.D., Buenos Aires, 1962; Ph.D., Chicago, 1971 Claude P. J. Ghez (also Neurology). B.S., Geneva, 1960; M.D, Harvard, 1964

Research Scientist

Shunichi Usami. M.B., Sheffield, 1972; Ph.D., London, 1979

Assistant Professors

Kung-Ming Jan (also Medicine). M.B., National Taiwan, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1971 Herbert Lipowsky. M.S., Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, 1968; Ph.D., California (San

Diego), 1975 Hugh Nellans (in Medicine). B.A., Lawrence, 1967; Ph.D., Yale, 1971

112 PHYSIOLOGY PSYCHIATRY

Associate Research Scientist

John Cresswell Firrell. B.Sc, Sheffield, 1972; Ph.D., London, 1979

Adjunct Associate Research Scientists

Ronald D. Carlin. B.S.. Fairleigh Dickinson, 1967; M.S., 1969; M.Phil., Columbia, 1973;

Ph.D., 1975 Dean A. Handley. B.S, Lycoming, 1971; M.S., Rutgers, 1976; Ph.D., 1978

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES STAFF ASSOCIATES

Jack T. Alexander, B.S. Valentin V. Corpus, D.D.M.

Szloma Kowarski, M.A. Robert G. King, B.Sc.

Psychiatry

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Acting Chairman

Sidney Malitz. B.S., Tulane, 1943; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1946

At New York State Psychiatric Institute

Professors

Eric R. Kandel (also Physiology). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Donald F. Klein. B.A., Colby, 1947; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1952 Irving Kupferman (also Physiology) (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.S.,

Florida, 1959; Ph.D., Chicago, 1964 Edward J. Sachar (Lawrence C. Kolb Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1952; M.D., Pennsylvania,

1956 Robert L. Spitzer. B.A., Cornell, 1953; M.D., New York University, 1957 Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine) (also Public Health). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D.,

Columbia, 1951

Professor of Biochemistry

Maurice M. Rapport. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; Ph.D., California Institute of Technology, 1946

Professor of Dentistry

Austin H. Kutscher. B.A., New York University, 1945; D.D.S., Columbia, 1946

Professor of Medical Psychology

Samuel Sutton. Ph.D., Chicago, 1955

Professor of Neuropathology

Leon Roizin. B.A., State Lyceum (Bessarabia), 1930; M.D., Royal University (Milan), 1936

Professor of Public Health

Denise B. Kandel (Sociomedical Sciences). B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.A., Columbia, 1953; Ph.D., 1960

PSYCHIATRY 113

Professor of Social Sciences

Bruce Dohrenwend (also Public Health) (Epidemiology). B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.A., 1951; Ph.D., Cornell, 1955

Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Gene G. Abel. M.D., Iowa, 1965

H. Donald Dunton (in Pediatrics). M.D., Rochester, 1945

L. Erlenmyer-Kimling (in Human Genetics and Development). B.S., Columbia, 1957; Ph.D.,

1960 Ronald R. Fieve. B.A., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D., Harvard, 1955

Archie R. Foley. B.A., Queens (Canada), 1943; M.D.,C.M., 1947; M.S., Columbia, 1962 Lothar Gidro-Franck. M.D., Columbia, 1948 Alexander H. Glassman. B.A., Illinois, 1956; M.D., 1958 Murray Glusman. B.S., New York University, 1934; M.D., 1938 Barry J. Garland. M.B., Ch.B., Cape Town, 1955 Joseph Jaffe. B.A., Columbia, 1944; M.D., New York University, 1947 Donald S. Kornfeld. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1950; M.D., Yale, 1954 John D. Rainer (in Human Genetics and Development). B.A., Columbia, 1941; M.A., 1944;

M.D., 1951 James H. Ryan. B.A., Yale, 1952; M.D., Harvard 1956 David Shaffer (also Pediatrics). M.D., London, 1961 John Weber. B.A., Duke, 1939; M.D., Yale, 1943

Professor of Clinical Psychiatry Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner (in Public Health). B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Professors of Clinical Psychology

Anke Ehrhardt. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1969

Rachel Gittelman. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1957; Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

Clinical Professors

Richard Druss. B.A., Yale, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959

Richard A. Gardner. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., State University of New York, 1956

Willard Gaylin. B.A., Harvard, 1947; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1951

Roger MacKinnon. M.D., Columbia, 1950

Lionel Ovesey. B.A., California (San Francisco), 1937; M.D., 1941

Ethel Person. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York University, 1960

Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

Rita Rudel. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1946; M.A., 1949; Ph.D., New York University, 1955

Associate Professor of Medical Psychology

Jacques Rutschmann. D.Sc, Geneva, 1956

Associate Professor of Neuropathology

Mavis Kaufman (in Pathology). M.D., New York Medical College, 1944

114 PSYCHIATRY

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurobiology and Behavior

Vincent F. Castellucci. B.A., Laval, 1960; B.Sc, 1964; Ph.D., Washington (St. Louis), 1968

Associate Professor of Clinical Neurochemistry

Hadassah Tamir. M.S., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1955; Ph.D., Israel Institute of Technology, 1959

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Liselotte Graf. M.D., Vienna, 1937

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Amiram Barkai. M.Sc, Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1963; Ph.D., 1970

Miron Baron. M.D., Tel Aviv, 1972

Ruth Bennett (Sociology) (in Public Health). B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

Jerrold S. Maxmen. B.A., Wayne State, 1963; M.D., 1967

Frederic M. Quitkin. B.A., Princeton, 1958; M.D., State University oi New York

(Downstate), 1962 Stuart Yudofsky. B.A., New York University, 1966; M.D., Baylor, 1970

Associate Professors of Clinical Psychology

Judith V. Becker. M.S., Eastern Washington State, 1968; Ph.D., Southern Mississippi, 1975

W. Crawford Clark. Ph.D., Michigan, 1958

Dennis D. Kelly. Ph.D., Columbia, 1966

Heino F. L. Meyer-Bahlburg. Ph.D., Dusseldorf, 1970

Judith Rabkin. B.A., Wellesley, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1967; M.P.H., Colum- bia, 1974

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychopharmacology

Thomas Cooper. M.A., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1970

Associate Clinical Professors

Anne E. Bernstein. B.A., Barnard, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Paul A. Bradlow. M.D., Hahnemann, 1946

Gloria Faretra. M.D., Georgetown, 1952

Rodman Gilder, Jr. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Arthur Green. B.A., Rochester, 1951; M.D., Amsterdam (The Netherlands), 1955

Stanley Heller. B.A., Yale, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Winslow R. Hunt. B.A., Chicago, 1946; M.A., 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Robert S. Liebert. B.S., Syracuse, 1951; M.A., Clark, 1956, M.D., New York University,

1960 Mary C. MacKay. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1959 Eric Marcus (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969 Donald I. Meyers. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1946; M.D., Jefferson, 1950 Helen C. Meyers. B.A., Hunter, 1945; M.D., New York University, 1949 John F. O'Connor. B.S., Columbia, 1948; M.D., State University of New York, 1952 Seymour Post. M.D., New York University, 1947 Daniel Shapiro. M.D., Illinois, 1945 Leonard M. Sheehy. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., McGill, 1968

PSYCHIATRY 115

Henry I. Spitz. B.A., Lafayette, 1961; M.D., New York Medical College, 1965 Ralph N. Wharton. M.D., Columbia, 1957

Associate Clinical Professor of Medical Psychology

Kenneth Frank. M.S., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professor of Neuropathology

Nicholas J. Willson. B.S., St Peter's, 1959; M.D., Seton Hall, 1963

Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatric Social Work

Bluma Swerdloff. D.S. W., Columbia, 1960

Research Scientist

Morton Levitt. M.S., George Washington, 1959; Ph.D., Howard, 1966

Assistant Professors of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Craig H. Bailey (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.A., Lehigh, 1967; M.S.,

1969; Ph.D., 1973 Samuel Schacher (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior). B.S., Columbia, 1971;

M.A., 1974; Ph.D., 1976 Klaudiusz R. Weiss (in the Center for Neurobiology and Behavior) M.A., Warsaw, 1967;

Ph.D., State University of New York (Stony Brook), 1973

Assistant Professors of Biochemistry

George Alexander. B.S., Hobart, 1949; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1953 Herbert L. Meltzer. B.S., Long Island 1942; Ph.D., Columbia, 1950

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Jerry Finkel (also Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1957; M.D., 1961

David Friedman. B.A., City University of New York, 1965; M.A., 1968; Ph.D., 1972

Abby Joy Fyer. B.A., Reed, 1969; M.D., New York University, 1973

Madelyn Schwartz Gould. A.A., Princeton, 1974; M.P.H., Columbia, 1976; M.Phil., 1978

Laurence L. Greenhill. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967

Kenneth Greenspan. M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963

Janos Kurucz. M.D., Budapest, 1950

Michael R. Liebowitz. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., 1969

Patrick J. McGrath, Jr. B.S., Seton Hall, 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Craig E. Polite. B.A., Toledo, 1969; M.A., Michigan State, 1971; Ph.D., 1972

Steven Paul Roose. B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1974

Lawrence Sharpe. D.P.M., London, 1961

Andrew Skodol. B.A., Yale, 1967; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1971

Bernard T. Walsh. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Harvard 1972

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychology

Edward Scott Charles. B.A., City University of New York, 1965; M.A., 1968; M.A., New

School for Social Research, 1974 Donald J. Dillon. Ph.D., Fordham, 1955 Helen Hanesian. B.S., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1953; M.A., Columbia, 1961;

Ed.D, 1966

116 PSYCHIATRY

Donald E. Hutchings (also Pediatrics). B.A., Lake Forest, 1959; M.A., Chicago, 1963; Ph.D.,

Columbia, 1965 Stephen E. Karpiak. Ph.D., Fordham, 1972 Dolores Kreisman. B.A., Barnard, 1953; Ph.D., Columbia, 1969 Isak Prohovnik. M.Sc, Lund (Sweden), 1980; Ph.D., 1981 Michael Seth Quittman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1968; Ph.D., Purdue, 1974 Cornelis Stokman. B.A., Nijmegen (The Netherlands), 1962; M.A., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D.,

1967

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Social Work

Janet B. Williams. B.S., Tufts, 1969; M.S., Southeastern Massachusetts, 1972; M.S.W., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Professors of Clinical Social Sciences

Alexander Askenazy. Ph.D., Columbia, 1962 Muriel Hammer. Ph.D., Columbia, 1961

Carol C. Schwartz (in Public Health). B.S., Columbia, 1962; M.S.N., Yale, 1965; M.Phil., 1967; Ph.D., 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Work

Nettie Terestman. M.S. W., Columbia, 1940; D.S. W., 1963

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology

Robert Bowker. B.S., Springfield, 1969; V.M.D., Pennsylvania, 1973; Ph.D., 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Public Health

Neil Jay Risch (Biostatistics). B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1972; M.S., Illinois, 1974; Ph.D., California (Los Angeles), 1979

Assistant Clinical Professors

Syed Abdullah. M.A., Calcutta, 1961; M.B., 1962

Harry D. Albert. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1962; M.D., 1965

Morton J. Aronson. B.A., Temple, 1944; M.D., 1947

John A. Atchley. M.D., Columbia, 1944

Athanasia Balkoura. M.D., Athens, 1960

Leah Beck. M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1943

Robinette Bell. B.A., Smith, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Raymond Bcrnick. B.S., Dalhousie (Canada), 1956; M.D., 1961

Stanley Bone. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1970; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1974

Edward N. Brennan. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1951; M.D., Yale, 1955

Paul F. Califano. B.A., Adelphi, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1954 Ian Alberto Canino. B.S., Georgetown, 1966; M.D., Puerto Rico, 1970 Harvey R. Chertoff. B.A., Columbia, 1962; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1966 Stanley J. Coen. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., 1962 Frances Cohen. B.A., Harvard, 1971; M.D., Columbia, 1975 Max P. Cohen. M.D., New York Medical College, 1947 Louise Coleman. M.D., Southern California, 1948

Francine Coumos. B.S., City College (New York), 1967; M.D., New York University, 1971 DeWitt L. Crandell. M.D., Arkansas, 1955 Barbara H. DeBetz. M.D., Miami (Florida), 1970 Zira De Fries. M.D., New York Medical College, 1942

PSYCHIATRY 117

Leonard Diamond. B.A., Tulane, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1973 Richard A. Dickes. B.A., Columbia, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967 Robert M. Elvolve. B.A., Michigan, 1962; M.D., Chicago, 1966 Charles F. Entclis. M.D., Virginia, 1974 James W. Flax. B.A., Antioch, 1971; M.D., Minnesota, 1974 Gerald I. Fogel. M.D., Michigan, 1962

Bruce Forester. B.A., Dartmouth, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965 Eugene A. Friedberg. M.D., Buffalo, 1958

Bimalendu Ganguly. M.B., B.S., Calcutta Medical College (India), 1964 Lee R. Gardner. B.A., Barnard, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1959 Myron R. Gershberg. B.A., Cornell, 1955; M.A., 1956; M.D., Buffalo, 1960 lona H. Ginsburg. B.A., Vassar, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Richard J. Glavin. B.A., Cornell, 1951; M.D., Rochester, 1955 Ana B. Click. B.A., Bennington, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1963 Robert Click. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Edwin A. Goldstein (in Pediatrics). B.A., Brooklyn, 1952; M.D., Union (Albany), 1958 Lloyd A. Hamilton, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Harvard, 1954 Harvey M. Hammer. B.A., Cornell, 1956; M.D., New York Medical College, 1960 Martin V. Hart. M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1950 Rose Hartmann. B.A., New York University, 1937; M.D., Women's Medical College of

Pennsylvania, 1945 Myra S. Hatterer. B.A., New York University, 1955; M.D., New York Medical College,

1959 Gregory Heimark. B.A., St. Olaf (Minnesota), 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960 Michelle L. Hirsch. B.S., City College (New York), 1968; M.D., State University of New York

(Syracuse), 1973 Joel S. Hoffman. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Steven E. Hyler. B.A., New York University, 1971; M.D., New York Medical College,

1975 Roberta Jaeger. B.A., Barnard, 1963; M.D., Columbia, 1966 David Jaffe. M.D., Jefferson, 1950

Frank S. Jewett (also Dentistry). B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957 Lila J. Kalinich. B.A., Northwestern, 1966; M.D., 1969 Neil B. Kavey. B.A., Princeton, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Thomas Kranjac. B.A., New York University, 1970; M.D., New York Medical College,

1975 Peter Laderman. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1940; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1947 Frederick Lane. B.A., Cornell, 1949; M.D., Yale, 1953 Leon Lefer. B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., Lausanne, 1952 Burton Lerner. B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.D., 1957 Steven J. Levitan. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., Buffalo, 1965 David Y. Levine. M.D., New York University, 1961 William McFarlane. B.A., Earlham (Indiana), 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Eric Marcus (also Social Medicine). B.A., Columbia, 1965; M.D., Wisconsin, 1969 Frederick Mendelsohn. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Stanford 1958 Michael Milano. B.A., Harvard, 1960; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1964 Robert S. Mumford. M.D., McGill, 1943

Philip R. Muskin. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.D., New York Medical College, 1974 Jaime Nos. M.D., Valencia (Spain), 1967; M.P.H., Columbia, 1975 David Douglas Olds. B.A., Yale, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1981 Louis Padovano. B.S., Georgetown, 1952; M.D., 1956 Robert P. Parkin. M.D., Dalhousie (Canada), 1950 David Peretz. B.A., College of the City of New York, 1954; M.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D.,

New York University, 1959 Kathryn F. Prescott. M.D., New York University, 1950

118 PSYCHIATRY

Lyle E. Rosnick. B.A., Columbia, 1970; M.D., 1974

Arnold Rothstein. B.A., Brown, 1958; M.D., Chicago Medical School, 1962

Boris Rubinstein (also Pediatrics). B.A., Colegio Israelita (Mexico City), 1961; M.D., Nacional

(Mexico), 1970;M.P.H., Harvard, 1974 Barbara Sacco. R.N., Mary Immaculate Hospital School of Nursing, 1 958 M. Bruce Sariin. B.A., M.D., Tulane, 1957 Irene B. Seeland. M.D., Heidelberg, 1965

Lawrence Shaderowfsky. B.A., Chicago, 1956; M.D., New York Medical School, 1960 Edward M. Shelley. B.A., Columbia, 1960; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1958 Charles Siegal. B.A., New York University, 1954; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1958 Frieda H. Spady. B.S., Columbia, 1963; M.D., New York Medical College, 1967 Jerome Steiner. B.A., Chicago, 1949; M.A., 1951; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1962 Jonathan W. Stewart. B.A., Swarthmore, 1967; M.D., Yale, 1971 Diane L. Stone. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970 Ann R. Turkel. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D., Albany Medical College, 1952 Gloria M. Warner. M.D., New York University, 1959 Martin Weiler. B.A., Syracuse, 1949; M.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Chicago Medical School,

1954 Josef H. Weissberg. M.S., Albany Medical College, 1952 George H. Wilkie. M.D., Harvard 1957 Donald A. Winn. M.D., Oklahoma, 1957 Beth K. Yudofsky. B.A., Smith, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976

Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatrics

Jane Eliot Fried. B.A., Vassar, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatric Psychology

Jeannette J. Jansky. B.S., Illinois, 1949; M.S., College of the City of New York, 1960; Ph.D., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Mark J. Blechner. M.S., Yale, 1975; Ph.D., 1977

Melinda Broman. B.A., Cornell, 1967; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1977

David Coron. B.A., Grinnell, 1971; M.A., Syracuse, 1974; Ph.D., Ottawa, 1979

Irwin Mansdorf. M.A., Adelphi, 1973; Ph.D., 1976

Letty Munz. B.A., New York University, 1950; M.D., College of the City of New York, 1952;

Ph.D., Columbia, 1974 Dennis Shuman. B.A., Brandeis, 1972; Ph.D., Harvard, 1976 Eric H. Singer. Ph.D., New York University, 1975 Gail L. Wasserman. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1967; M.A., Illinois, 1970; Ph.D., City University of

New York, 1977

Assistant Clinical Professors of Psychiatric Social Work

Miriam Gibbon. B.A., Antioch, 1954; M.S. W., Columbia, 1957 Bobba Jean Moody. B.A., Hunter, 1964; M.S. W., Fordham, 1968

David McDonnell. B.A., St Mary's (Baltimore), 1964; M.S. W., Pennsylvania, 1966; D.S. W., 1972

PSYCHIATRY 119

Associate Research Scientists

Samuel W. Anderson. B.A., George Washington, 1958; Ph.D., Harvard, 1965

David P. Birkett. M.B., B.Ch., South Wales, 1957

Richard L. Blumenthal. B.A., Cornell, 1947; M.A., New School for Social Research, 1951; Ph.D., New York University, 1961

Barbara Ann Comblatt. B.A., Syracuse, 1964; M.B.A., City University of New York, 1977; Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1978

Richard Feldman. Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Mitchell L. Kietzman. Ph.D., California (Los Angeles), 1962

Sahebarao Mahadik. Ph.D., Poona (India), 1969

Mary S. Mittelman. M.S., Columbia, 1969; Dr.P.K, 1980

John Nee. B.S., National Taiwan, 1966; Ph.D., Pennsylvania State, 1973; M.P.H., Colum- bia, 1977

Arthur S. Perumal. B.Sc, Madras, 1958; M.Sc., 1963; Ph.D., Indian Institute of Science, 1969

Stephanie Portnoy. Ph.D., Columbia, 1968

Graham F. Pringle. Ph.D., New York University, 1982

Kurt Salzinger. Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Suzanne Salzinger. Ph.D., Columbia, 1964

David E. Wilder. Ph.D., Columbia, 1959

SPECIAL LECTURERS

Viola W. Bernard, M.D. John A. Cook, M.D. Katrina De Hirsch, B.A. Marjorie H. Frank George Goldman, M.D. Soil Goodman, M.D. George A. Jervis, M.D. Henriette R. Klein, M.D. Lawrence C. Kolb, M.D. Bernard Pacella, M.D. Herbert Spiegel, M.D. Leo Srole, M.D. Alberta Szalita, M.D. Virginia Wilking, M.D. Joseph Zubin, M.D.

LECTURERS

Kenneth Z. Altschuler, M.D. Ann H. Appelbaum, M.D. Jacob A. Arlow, M.D. Stuart A. Asch, M.D. Henry Bachrach, Ph.D. Bruce Ballard, M.D. Jose Barchilon, M.D. Beatrice Beebe, M.D. Milton M. Berger, M.D. Hector Bird, M.D. Marion S. Blank, Ph.D. Henry Brill, M.D. Alexander Broden, M.D. Gerard E. Bruder, Ph.D. Arnold M. Cooper, M.D. Richard J. Davidson, Ph.D. Paul William DeBell, M.D.

LECTURERS (continued) Lawrence Deutsch, M.D. Samuel L. Feder, M.D. Allen Frances, M.D. Sheldon Gaylin, M.D. Barbara Gillam-Lawergren,

Ph.D. Matthew Gold, M.S. Eugene L. Goldberg, M.D. Marianne R. Goldberger,

M.D. David S. Goldman, M.D. Gary Grad, M.D. Lillian Gross, M.D. William I. Grossman, Ph.D. Ernest M. Gruenberg, M.D. Gad Hakerem, Ph.D. Howard F. Hunt, Ph.D. Richard A. Isay, M.D. Jerome Jaffe, M.D. Steven E. Katz, M.D. Otto F. Kernberg, M.D. Paulina Kerberg, M.D. Gilbert W. Kliman, M.D. Alan M. Levy, M.D. Ee-Sing Lo, Ph.D. Erica Loutsch, M.D. Mark Mankoff, M.D. Murial Morris, M.D. Wayne A. Myers, M.D. Abbas Nahas, M.D. John M. Oldham, M.D. Samuel W. Perry, M.D. Robert W. Rieber, Ph.D. Bennett L. Rosner, M.D.

LECTURERS (continued) Ellen Rowntree, M.D. Franklin D. Russek, M.D. Harold Sackeim, Ph.D. Michael Sacks, M.P.H. Safa Saribeyoglu, M.D. Roy Schafer, Ph.D. Jonah W. Schein, M.D. Jesse Schomer, M.D. Geri Ellen Schwartz, Ph.D. Sally Severino, M.D. Bonnie Jean Spring, Ph.D. Leo Stone, M.D. Michael Stone, M.D. Milton Viederman, M.D. Marvin Wasserman, M.D. Martin S. WiUick, M.D. Sheldon Zimberg, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Donald C. Bell, M.D. Alvin J. Click, M.D. Ivan Goldberg, M.D. Gurston Goldin, M.D. Arthur R. Jacobs, M.D. Naomi Leiter, M.D. Virginia Lozzi, M.D. Ira L. Mintz, M.D. Joseph C. Napoli, M.D. Gerda Strika, M.D. Hector O. Varas, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Anita K. Fischer, M.A. Kazuo Yamaguchi, Ph.D.

120 PSYCHIATRY

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Geary E. Ahem, M.D. Satwani Ahluwalia, M.B.,

B.S. Paul J. Ambrosini, M.D. liana L. Appelby, Ph.D. John J. Barsa, M.D. Barbara J. Bouley, M.D.,

O.T.R. Abraham A. Bridger, M.D. Alexis Brosen, M.D. Janel S. Carino, M.D. Edmund Chaitman, M.D. Leon Chattah, M.D. Daniel Eliot Cohen, M.D. Charles Andrew Dackis,

M.D. Susan M. Deakins, M.D. Dominick Di Fabio, M.D. James E. Dillon, M.D. Jennifer 1. Downey, M.D. Paula Eagle, M.D. Katherine Falk, M.D. Sylvia M. Furstenberg, M.D. Jack Matthew Gorman,

M.D. Rosalie Greenberg, M.D. Stanley M. Hertz, M.D. Martin J. Hoffman, M.D. Stanislaw P. Jonas, M.D. Andres M. Kanner, M.D. Sherry Katz-Bearnot, M.D. Bonnie Kaufman, M.D. Robert Kertzner, M.D. Harold S. Koplewicz, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Richard A. Kresch, M.D. Jean Keller Miller, M.D. Josefina Moneda, M.D. Craig M. Morris, M.D. Patricio R. Paez, M.D. Steven M. Papp, M.B.A. Harris Rabinovich, M.D. Phyllis B. Robbins, M.D. Rogelio Roncal, M.D. Jeffrey Rosecan, M.D. Neal Ryan, M.D. Robert Santulli, M.D. Robert S. Schachter, M.D. David P. Schiebel, M.D. Irwin S. Schonfeld, Ph.D. Karl John Schroeder, M.D. Jonathan R. Schwartz, M.D. Beth June Seelig, M.D. Samuel Simmens, M.A. Gloria Jean Stern, M.D. Fay Stetner, M.S. Rafael Tavares, M.D. Paul Douglas Trautman,

M.D. Thomas J. Yager, M.D. Gerald R. Yagoda, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Rhianon Allen, Ph.D. Richard P. Cressen, Ph.D. Judith F. Feldman, Ph.D. Richard Gaines, Ph.D. Gail Levy, Ph.D. Linda J. Skinner, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Natalie F. Been, M.S.W. Bruce Y. Bleecker, M.S.W. Susan Braiman, M.S.W. Carla Daichman, M.S.W. Patricia Fink, M.S.W. Elizabeth Golden, M.S.W. Kathleen C. Lopez, M.S. Sally Lord, M.S.W. Reed C. W. Moskowitz,

M.D. Reggie Swenson, M.S.W. Anna C. Welton, M.S.W.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL WORK

L. Robert Adams, M.S.W.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Selda Diatlo, M.S. Karen Goldberg, M.S.W. Stephen D. Rosenheck,

M.S.W. Fran Silverman, M.S.W.

STAFF ASSOCIATES Raymond R. Goetz, M.A. Edward Michael Herman,

Ph.D. Joan Layton, M.A. Mary W. Masland, M.S. Richard K. Replin, B.A.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor

Harvey Gurian. M.D., Toronto, 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

Larry Kenneth Brown. B.S., Maryland, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1976

John E. Denny. Ph.D., Massachusetts, 1971

Charles J. Hudson. B.A., Princeton, 1959; M.D., McGill, 1963

Charles W. Lamb. Ph.D., Ohio State, 1966

Eugene J. Pilek. B.S., lona, 1967; M.D, Cornell, 1971

At Harlem Hospital

Clinical Professor

James L. Curtis. B.A., Albion, 1944; M.D., Michigan, 1946

PSYCHIATRY 121

Associate Clinical Professors

William A. Ellis, Jr. B.A., Howard, 1960; M.D., 1965

Margaret M. Lawrence. B.A., Cornell, 1936; M.D., Columbia, 1940

Assistant Professors of Clinical Psychiatry

Emery S. Hetrick. B.A., Ohio State, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1957 Austin Moore. B.S., Queens (New York), 1955; M.D., Howard, 1959 Peter H. Schween. M.D., Hamburg, 1955

Assistant Clinical Professors

Sumansiri Alahendra. M.B., B.S., Ceylon (Sri Lanka), 1963

Shale Brownstein. B.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1955; M.D., 1959

Carol Leal. B.S., Louisiana State, 1963; M.D., Howard, 1967

Milton Lee. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York Medical College, 1956

J. Trevor Lindo. B.A., New York University, 1946; M.D., Lausanne, 1957

Sidney M. Lytton. B.A., Maryland, 1949; M.D., 1955

Henry L. McCurtis. B.S., Texas Southern, 1968; M.D., Stanford, 1974

Gideon Nachumi. B.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1958 Raymond W. Ransom. B.S., Howard, 1962; M.D., 1967 Raymond Raskin. B.A., New York University, 1942; M.D., 1946 Sady Sultan. M.D., Universidad Central de Venezuela, 1971 Pauline E. Thompson. M.D., Howard, 1944 Robert L. Walton. M.B., B.S., Melbourne, 1966

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

PSYCHIATRY q^^^^^ g. Lakner, M.P.H.

Sydney C. Bush, M.D. Frank F. Thompson, M.D. Ellis B. Charles, M.D.

Agustin A. Gomez, M.D. INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

Kwang Chin Kim, M.D. PSYCHOLOGY

Carol Garmiza, Ph.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY Sherry Barron-Seabrook, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professors

Albert M. Bromberg. B.S., William and Mary, 1953; M.D., Duke, 1957 Daniel J. O'Connell. B.A., Fordham, 1953; M.D., Cornell, 1961 Linus Root. B.S., Georgetown, 1953; M.D., 1957

Ronald Sorvino. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1954; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1958

LECTURER

Morton Friedman, M.D.

122 PSYCHIATRY

At St. Luke's-Rcx)sevelt Hospital Center

Clinical Professor

Clarice Kestenbaum. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1950; M.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Gary Lee Lefer. B.S., Stanford, 1962; M.D., Georgetown, 1966 Adam Munz. Ph.D., New York University, 1969 Stephen P. Reibel. B.A., Harvard, 1957; M.D., 1961

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Shepard J. Kantor. B.A., Colby, 1965; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1969

Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychology

Harry Kissileff. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1962; Ph.D., 1966

Assistant Clinical Professors

Gail B. Allen. B.A., Wellesley, 1957; M.D., New York University, 1961

Frederic A. Ailing. B.A., Princeton, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1961

Alex Caemmerer, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1947

Irene Chiarandini. M.D., Buenos Aires, 1963

Ralph Colp, Jr. B.A., Columbia, 1945; M.D., 1948

Robert A. Cutick. B.A., Brooklyn, 1957; M.A., Pennsylvania, 1961; Ph.D., 1962

Kathleen Degen. B.A., St. Joseph's (New York), 1967; MD., Bologna, 1972

Paul Dince. M.D., New York University, 1948

Nathaniel Donson. B.A., Cornell, 1958; M.D., New York University, 1962

John A. Fogelman. B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1964 Leo Kron. M.D., British Columbia, 1971 David M. MacDonald. B.S., Oregon, 1945; M.D., Tufts, 1949 James M. McGowan. B.A., Notre Dame, 1960; M.D., Kentucky, 1964 Eugene Mahon. M.D., National (Ireland), 1964 John A. Milici. B.A., Yale, 1947; M.D., Geneva, 1957 Howard Millman. B.A., Cornell, 1965; M.D., New York University, 1969 Paul William Nassar. B.A., New York University, 1963; M.D., Rome, 1968 Kenneth Porter. B.A., Harvard, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1969 Harry R. Potter. B.S., Yale, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1962 John W. Rosenberger. B.A., Dartmouth, 1956; M.D.C.M., McGill, 1960 Sirgay Sanger. B.A., Harvard, 1956; M.D., 1960 George Satran. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., New York University, 1956 Robert D. Scharf. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1970 Eleanor Schuker. B.A., Swarthmore, 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965 Ira B. Silverstein. B.A., Princeton, 1960; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1964 William M. Tucker. B.A., Harvard 1962; M.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Howard K. Welsh. B.S., City College (New York), 1966; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971 Harvey L. White. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., New York Medical College, 1964 C. Philip Wilson. B.A., Yale, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

Assistant Clinical Professors of Medical Psychology

Scott Baum. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1971; Ph.D., City University of New York, 1977 James D. Meltzer. B.A., Columbia, 1968; Ph.D., New York University, 1973

PSYCHIATRY PUBLIC HEALTH 123

SPECIAL LECTURERS John Cotton, M.D. Lilli C. Shalsa, M.D.

LECTURERS

Terry J. Golash, M.D.

John L. Schimel, M.D.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

William H. Brownlee, M.D. Lucy E. Collins, M.D. Stephen C. Glassberg, M.D. Sonia W. Hyman, M.D. Ernesto Lozano, M.D. Arthur M. Perlman, M.D. Barbara R. Rosenfeld, M.D. Mitchell S. Rosenthal, M.D. William D. Wheat, M.D. Alexander V. Voitaskevsky, M.D.

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Blanche Glass, Ph.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Peter Aldin, M.D. Cyrus Aroomlooi, M.D. Michael E. Barberie, M.D. Nigel M. Bark, M.D. Charles Lee Bell, M.D. Arline C. Caldwell, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Victor D'Arc, M.D. Leonard Deutsch, M.D. Andrew B. Druck, M.D. Laura Duval, M.D. Osvaldo J. Evangelista,

M.D. Hanne E. Favelukes, M.D. Harold M. Fogelman, M.D. Shirin Ghaemmaghami,

M.D. Maurice R. Green, M.D. Maurice Haberman, M.D. Charles L. Ihlenfeld, M.D. Charles G. Jackson, Jr.,

M.D. David K. Jordan, M.D. Kenneth R. Jungblut, M.D. Willard S. Kahn, M.D. Robert J. Kent, M.D. liana Kochen, M.D. Marvin Roy Kremberg, M.D. Woon Soon Lee, M.D. Enrique Madriga-Segura,

M.D. Henry Clay Mallard, M.D. Donald Mayerson, M.D. Jeffrey R. Nurenberg, M.D. Henry A. Paul, M.D. Michael W. Pawel, M.D. Antonio G. Pena, M.D. Arthur S. Piatt, D.O. Ellen M. Piatt, D.O.

INSTRUCTORS (continued) Maria Rodriguez-Boulan,

M.D. Jeffrey H. Sacks, D.O. Pellegrino J. Sarti, M.D. Mona Schneider, M.D. Carlotta L. Schuster, M.D. Christin M. Sekaer, M.D. Jane Simon, M.D. Melvin L. Thrash, M.D. Joel Tricarico, M.D. Martha C. Troutman, M.D. Maria C. L. Velez, M.D. Joel Wallack, M.D. David S. Weinberger, M.D. Olin West, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

Andrew B. Druck, Ph.D. Ruth Wallach Mollod, Ph.D. Joan Schaeffer, Ph.D. Susan Butler See, Ph.D. Roy Shapiro, Ph.D. Michael Stern, M.A.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK

Rhoda M. Krawitz, Ph.D.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY

Keith Sedlacek, M.D. Nestor J. Totero, M.D.

Public Health

Joseph R. Delamar Professor of Public Health Practice, Dean and Chairman

Robert J. Weiss (also Medicine) (also Psychiatry). B.A., George Washington, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Biostatistics

Professors

Joseph L. Fleiss (Division Head). B.A., Columbia, 1959; M.S., 1961; Ph.D., 1967 John Van Ryzin. B.S., Marquette, 1957; M.S., 1959; Ph.D., Michigan State, 1964

Clinical Professor

Oliver Glidewell. B.A., Lycoming, 1956; M.A., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1964

124 PUBLIC HEALTH

Adjunct Professor

Carl H. Erhardt. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1941; M.P.A., New York University, 1957; M.S., Harvard, 1958; D.Sc, 1962

Associate Professors of Clinical Public Health

Bruce Levin (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.A., Harvard, 1972; Ph.D.,

1974 Patrick Shrout (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., St. Louis, 1972; Ph.D., Chicago, 1976 Sylvan Wallenstein. B.S., City College (New York), 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1971

Research Scientist

Neal W. Chilton. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1939; D.D.S., New York University, 1942; M.P.H, Columbia, 1946

Assistant Professors

Robert R. Golden. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1960; M.S., Oregon State, 1963;

Ph.D., Minnesota, 1976 Neil Jay Risch (in Psychiatry). B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1972; M.S., Illinois,

1974; Ph.D., California (Los Angeles), 1979

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Sol Blumenthal. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1955; M.B.A., New York University,

1958; Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1969 Donald C. Ross. B.A., Rochester, 1955; M.A., North Carolina, 1957; Ph.D., 1960 Martin Schnall. B.A., Yeshiva, 1955; M.S., Columbia, 1957; M.B.A., New York University,

1974; Ph.D., American International, 1978

LECTURERS INSTRUCTORS

Allen S. Ginsburg, Ph.D. Carol A. Bodian, M.S.

Judith D. Goldberg, Sc.D. Frieda Nelson, B.A.

Dorothy P. Rice, B.A. Molly Park, M.A.

Robert Rosenfeld, Ph.D. Alex Tytun, Dr.P.H.

Andre A.O. Varma, M.D.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE

Livia R. Turgeon, M.S.

Environmental Health Sciences

Professors

Dezider Grunberger (also Biochemistry) (in the Institute of Cancer Research). M.Sc, Technical (Czechoslovakia), 1950; Ph.D., Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1956; Sc.D, 1968

I. Bernard Weinstein (Division Head) (also Medicine) (in the Cancer Center). B.S., Wisconsin, 1952; M.D, 1955

Research Scientist

Granville H. Sewell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1959; Ph.D., 1966

PUBLIC HEALTH 125

Assistant Professors

Alan M. Jeffrey (also Pharmacology). B.S., Hull (England), 1966; Ph.D., University College

of North Wales, 1970 Regina P. Santella. B.S., Brooklyn, 1969; M.S., Massachusetts, 1971; Ph.D., City University

of New York, 1976

Assistant Clinical Professors

Joseph L. Crumrine. B.S., Illinois, 1942; M.D., 1945

Maurice E. Goldman. B.A., Princeton, 1951; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1955

James A. Hathaway. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1964; M.D., 1967; M.P.H., 1969

Frederica P. Perera. B.A., Radcliffe, 1963; M.P.H., Columbia, 1976; Dr.P.K, 1981

LECTURERS LECTURERS (continued)

Allan H. Conney, Ph.D. Haig-Michael D. Utidjian, F.O.M.

Jean B. Cropper, M.P.H. Charles S. Warren, J.D.

Michael McCann, Ph.D. Jacqueline M. Warren, J.D.

Dhun B. Patel, Ph.D.

Thomas T. Shen, Ph.D. ' STAFF ASSOCIATE

Leslie R. Andrews, M.A.

Epidemiology

Professors

Jennifer L. Kelsey (Division Head). B.A., Smith, 1964; M.P.H., Yale, 1966; M.Phil., 1968;

Ph.D., 1969 Bruce P. Dohrenwend (also Psychiatry). B.A., Columbia, 1950; M.A., 1951; Ph.D., Cornell,

1955 Zena A. Stein (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Cape Town, 1941; M.A., 1942; B.Ch.,

Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950 Mervyn W. Susser (Sergievsky Professor). M.B., B.Ch., Witwatersrand (South Africa), 1950

Professor of Clinical Psychiatric Epidemiology

Thomas S. Langner. B.A., Harvard, 1948; Ph.D., Columbia, 1954

Associate Professors

Bernard Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1961 Willard Allen Hauser (also Neurology) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Western Reserve,

1958; M.D., St. Louis, 1962 Elmer Struening. B.S., Hastings, 1949; M.S., Purdue, 1951; Ph.D., 1957

Adjunct Associate Professors

Patricia R. Cohen. B.A., Hamline, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1968 Holger H. Hansen. M.D., Freie Universitat (Berlin), 1 961; M.P.H, Columbia, 1967; Dr.P.H, 1973

Research Scientists

Inge F. Goldstein. B.A., Wellesley, 1951; M.S., Pittsburgh, 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1968; Dr.P.H, 1976

126 PUBLIC HEALTH

Lillian M. Belmont (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Brooklyn, 1947; M.A., College of the City of New York, 1949; Ph.D., New York University, 1957; M.S., Columbia, 1970

Assistant Professors

Ora S. Fagan. B.A., Hebrew (Jerusalem), 1961; M.S.W., California (Berkeley), 1965;

D.S.W.,1973 Bruce G. Link. B.A., Earlham, 1971; Ph.D., Columbia, 1980 Nigel S. Paneth (also Pediatrics) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.D.,

Harvard, 1972; M.P.H, Columbia, 1978 Ruth Ottman (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1975; Ph.D., 1980 Sten H. Vermund (also Pediatrics). B.A., Stanford, 1974; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1977; M.S.,

D.P.H., London School of Tropical Medicine, 1981 Stephen Shafer (also Neurology) (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D.,

Columbia, 1970; M.P.H, 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Ann B. Goodman. B.A., Radcliffe, 1953; M.A., George Washington, 1963; M.S., Columbia,

1972 Paul S. May. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1951; M.S., Syracuse, 1952; D.Sc,

Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, 1955; M.P.H, Columbia, 1970 Gregory L. Muhlin. B.A., City College (New York), 1968; M.A., John Jay, 1972; Ph.D., City

University of New York, 1978; M.S., Columbia, 1981

Associate Research Scientists

Jennie K. Kline (in the Sergievsky Center). B.A., Chicago, 1972; M.S., Columbia, 1974;

M.Phil., 1975; Ph.D., 1977 Robert A. Lubin. B.A., Rutgers, 1971; M.A., Vermont, 1974; Ph.D., 1976; M.P.H,

Columbia, 1979 Elena S. H. Yu. B.A., San Carlos, 1968; M.A., Notre Dame, 1971; Ph.D., 1974

SPECIAL LECTURER STAFF ASSOCIATES

Anna C. Gelman, M.P.H. Diana Hartel, M.P.H.

Alfred I. Neugut, M.D., Ph.D. LECTURERS

Stephen M. Friedman, M.D., M.P.H. Alan R. Kristal, Dr.P.H. Jaime E. OUe, M.D., M.P.H.

Health Administration

Professors

Howard L. Bailit (Division Head). D.M.D., Tufts, 1962; M.A., Harvard, 1964; Ph.D., 1967 Lowell E. Bellin. B.S., Yale, 1948; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1951;

M.P.H, Harvard, 1964 Lucie S. Kelly (also Nursing). B.S.N., Pittsburgh, 1947; M.Litt., 1957; Ph.D., 1965 Samuel Wolfe. M.D., Toronto, 1950; M.P.H, Columbia, 1960; Dr.P.H, 1961

Adjunct Professors

Arne C. Barkhaus (Public Health Practice). B.A., Copenhagen, 1926; M.D., 1933; D.P.H,

Johns Hopkins, 1938 Joseph V. Terenzio. B.A., Yale, 1939; J.D., Fordham, 1947; M.S., Columbia, 1954

PUBLIC HEALTH 127

Clinical Professor

Arthur Manoharan (at Harlem Hospital). M.B., B.S., Madras, 1951; Dr.P.H., Columbia, 1960

Associate Professors

Bernard Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate),

1961; M.P.H., Harvard, 1963 Jeanne M. Stellman. B.S., City College (New York), 1968; Ph.D., 1972

Associate Professor of Clinical Public Health

Stephen N. Rosenberg. B.A., Cornell, 1963; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1967; M.P.H., Harvard, 1969

Adjunct Associate Professors

Noreen M. Clark. B.S., Utah, 1965; M.A., Columbia, 1972; Ph.D., 1976

Harold Fruchtbaum (History and Philosophy of Public Health). B.C.E., New York University,

1955; M.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1956; Ph.D., Harvard, 1964 Lloyd F. Novick. B.A., Colgate, 1961; M.D., New York University, 1965; M.P.H, Yale,

1971 Irving S. Shapiro (Public Health Education). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1938;

M.S., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1954

Assistant Professors

Willine Carr. B.A., North Carolina (Greensboro), 1 967; M.P.H, North Carolina (Chapel Hill),

1970 Fred Goldman. B.A., Queens (New York), 1967; M.A., Brown, 1970; Ph.D., City College

(New York), 1975 Sheila A. Gorman. B.S., R.N, Niagara, 1959; M.P.H, Columbia, 1972 Marcia L. Pinkett-Heller. B.A., Howard, 1963; M.P.H, Michigan, 1970 Levi A. Sorrell. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1976; M.B.A., 1978; Ph.D.,

1982 Ralph Joseph UUman. B.A., Cornell, 1970; M.B.A., Rochester, 1972; M.S., 1979

Assistant Professors of Nursing

Melanie Dreher. B.S.N. , Long Island, 1967; Ph.D., Columbia, 1977

Lois A. Grau. B.S.N., Marquette, 1968; M.S., Wisconsin, 1976; Ph.D., 1979

Assistant Clinical Professor

John Anthony Benvenuto, Jr. M.D., New York Medical College, 1968

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Raymond S. Alexander. B.A., Dartmouth, 1953; M.B.A., 1954; M.S., Columbia, 1956 John Baer. B.A., Oberlin, 1959; M.S., Columbia, 1961; D.P.A., New York University,

1967 Arlene Bregman. B.A., State University of New York (Albany), 1971; M.P.D., Columbia,

1975 Annette Choolfaian. B.S., Bridgeport, 1964; M.P.A., New York University, 1972 Merle C. Cunningham. B.A., Rochester, 1976; M.D., Columbia, 1972; M.P.H, 1976

128 PUBLIC HEALTH

Anita Stiles Curran. B.A., Connecticut, 1951; M.D., New York Medical College, 1955;

M.P.H., Columbia, 1974 Harriet S. Goldman (also Dental and Oral Surgery). B.A., New York University, 1962;

D.D.S., 1965;M.P.H., Columbia, 1966 Nancy Graham (Health Administration). B.S., Columbia, 1956; M.A., New York University,

1960; M.P.H., Columbia, 1972; Dr.P.K, 1976 William H. Hermann. B.S., Missouri, 1951; M.S., Yale, 1953 Nicholas Herskovits. B.B.A., Bernard Baruch School of Business and Public Administration,

1963 Sonja Johansen. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1958; M.A., 1960; M.P.A., Alaska, 1978;

M.Phil., Columbia, 1981; Ph.D., 1982 Henry R. Karpe. B.B.A., College of the City of New York, 1952; M.S., Wisconsin, 1972 Nicetas H. Kuo (Public Health Practice). B.A., San Francisco State, 1954; M.A., 1956;

Ed.D., Columbia, 1965 W. David Latham. B.S, Stanford 1966; M.B.A., 1968 Francis C. Lindaman. B.A., Gettysburg 1935; M.A., 1936 William L. Nute, Jr. B.A., Swarthmore, 1938; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1943 P. Bertrand Phillips (Public Health Practice). B.A., San Francisco State, 1954; M.A., 1956;

Ed.D., Columbia, 1965 Joseph F. Pofit, Jr. (at Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital). B.A., Northeastern, 1973; M.S.,

1975;M.P.H., Columbia, 1977 Eleanore Rothenberg. B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; M.P.A., New York University, 1969; Ph.D.,

1975 Esther A. Schisa (Public Health Practice). B.S., Syracuse, 1947; M.A., Columbia, 1955 Sheila M. Smythe. B.S., Creighton, 1952; M.S., Columbia, 1956 Boris, A. Vanadzin. M.D., Munich, 1955; M.P.H., California (Berkeley), 1959 Michael L. Ziegler. B.A., State University of New York (Albany), 1972; J.D., State

University of New York (Buffalo), 1976

SPECIAL LECTURERS Gloria L. A. Dammann,

M.P.H. Beatrice Mintz, M.P.H.

LECTURERS

Kenneth Adamec, M.S. George H. Adams, M.S. Frederick D. Alley, M.S. Allan C. Anderson, M.H.A. Peter Baglio, Sc.M. Richard A. Berman, M.B.A.,

M.H.A. Robert L. Boyar, B.Arch. William H. Brown, B.A. Carlos J. Caguiat, M.P.H. Martin Cherkasky, M.D. Irene Clark, M.P.H. Alvin J. Conway, M.S. Daniel L. Drosness, M.P.H. Gary M. Eidsvold, M.D. Yehudi M.Felman, M.D. Andrew C. Fleck, Jr., M.D. Thomas J. Foley, M.S. Stephen L. Forstenzer, M.S. Nicholas Freudenberg,

Dr.P.H.

LECTURERS (continued) Herbert M. Friedman,

M.B.A. Bernard Fuss, M.S. Gary Gambuti, M.P.A. Terrance E. Gardet, M.P.H. George Goldberg, M.B.A. Margaret M. Griesmer, B.S. Margaret T. Grossi, M.D. Anne C. Hargeaves, M.S. David Harris, M.D. Frank W. Hays, M.B.A. Cathy M. Idema, M.P.H. Pascal J. Imperato, M.D.,

M.P.H. Florence Kavaler, M.D. John T. Kolody, M.S. Jacob L. Lindenthal, Ph.D.,

Dr.P.H. Regina Loewenstein, M.A. Vivian E. Lubin, M.P.H. Elaine Lugovoy, M.A. Richard K. Manoff, M.S. Robert Markowitz, M.S. Lawrence E. McDevitt, B.A. Mary C. McLaughlin, M.D. Charles H. Meyer, M.S.

LECTURERS (continued) Penelope F. Murphy, M.S. Anthony C. Mustalish, M.D. Janet M. Nakushian, M.A. Kad E. Nelson, M.S. Margaret J. O'Brien, M.P.H. Donna O'Hare, M.D. Jean Pakter, M.D. Clarence E. Pearson, M.S. Richard H. Perry, M.S. Olive E. Pitkin, M.D. Peter Rogatz, M.D. Edward J. Rosasco, Jr.,

M.B.A. Alan H. Rosenblut, M.B.A. Hana Rostain, M.D. Rachel Rotkovitch, Ph.D. Harvey Schoenfeld, M.B.A. Joseph Sherber, M.S. Elliot J. Simon, M.S. Alvin H. Strelnick, M.D. Thomas J. G. Tighe, M.P.H. Margaret E. Walsh, M.Litt.

INSTRUCTORS Stephen Banks, M.D. Peter D. Bardax, J.D.

PUBLIC HEALTH 129

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Barbara S. Cooper, M.D. Catherine D. Crone, M.D. Neal A. Demby, D.M.D.,

M.P.H. Michael Goldfarb, M.S. Ruthe Haase, M.A. Margaret L. Haynes, M.P.H. Steven Karten, M.B.A. Dulcy B. Miller, M.S.

INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Lin H. Mo, M.B.A., M.P.H. Thomas A. Sherwood,

M.P.H. Joseph B. Stamm, M.P.A. Virginia K. Stowe, M.S. Sam R. Toussie, Ph.D.

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Michael J. Leahy, M.B.A.

ASSOCIATES Renton Bond, B.A. Robert M. Carr, M.B.A. Deborah E. Halper, M.P.H. Anne B. Jacobs, M.P.H. Ann R. Warner, B.A. Marc S. Wolfert, M.P.H. Ilise A. Zimmerman, M.P.H.

Population and Family Health

Professor

Allan G. Rosenfeld (Division Head) (also Obstetrics and Gynecology). M.D., Columbia, 1959

B.A., Harvard, 1955;

Professors of Clinical Public Health

Nicholas Cunningham (also Pediatrics). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1955;

Dr.P.H, 1976 Giorgio R. Solimano (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). M.D., Chile, 1960 John A. Ross (in the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). B.A.,

Ottawa, 1956; M.A., Yale, 1957; Ph.D., 1961 Joe D. Wray. B.A., Stanford, 1947; M.D., 1952; M.P.H, North Carolina, 1967

Associate Professor

Susan G. Philliber. B.A., Florida State, 1965; M.S., 1966; Ph.D., 1968

Adjunct Associate Professors

John Bongaarts. M.S., Eindhoven Institute of Technology (The Netherlands), 1968; Ph.D.,

Illinois, 1972

Joy G. Dryfoos. B.A., Antioch, 1951; M.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1966

Thomas Frejka. Engineer, Czechoslovakia Academy of Sciences, 1966

Associate Professors of Clinical Public Health

Martin L. Gorosh. B.A., Brooklyn, 1959; M.P.H, Johns Hopkins, 1969; Dr.P.H, 1973 Stephn L. Isaacs. B.A., Brown, 1961; J.D., Columbia, 1956

Senior Research Associate

Walter B. Watson. B.A., Southern Methodist, 1953; M.S., Wisconsin, 1954; Ph.D., 1959

Assistant Professors

Katherine F. Darabi. B.A., Syracuse, 1969; M.S., Columbia, 1975; M.Phil, 1977; Ph.D.,

1980 Judith E. Jones. B.A., Hunter, 1956

Pearila Namerow. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1970; M.Phil, Columbia, 1974; Ph.D., 1976 S. Jaime Rozovski (in the Institute of Human Nutrition). B.S., Chile, 1969; M.S., Columbia,

1971; Ph.D., 1977

130 PUBLIC HEALTH

William A. Van Wie. B.A., Wooster, 1961; B.D., Pittsburgh Seminary, 1964; M.P.H., North

Carolina, 1968; Dr.P.K, 1974 Maxine Weinstein (in the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). B.S.,

Antioch, 1969; M.A., Princeton, 1979; Ph.D., 1981

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Catherine Cowell. B.S., Hampton Institute, 1945; M.S., Connecticut, 1947

Assistant Clinical Professors

Rosemary Barber-Madden. B.A., Jersey City State, 1968; M.S., Hunter, 1977; Ed.D.,

Temple, 1980 Susan Nalder (in the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction). B.S.,

Washington (Seattle), 1965; M.P.H., Johns Hopkins, 1970 Linda A. Randolph. B.S., Howard, 1962; M.D., 1967; M.P.H., California (Berkeley), 1971

Assistant Professor of Clinical Public Health

Michele G. Shedlin. B.S., Columbia, 1968; M.A., 1975; M.A., 1982; Ph.D., 1982

Associate Research Scientist

Henry J. Elkins, Jr. B.A., Yale, 1959; M.A., Chicago, 1968; Ph.D., 1970

LECTURERS STAFF ASSOCIATES

Roy E. Brown, M.P.H. Elizabeth K. Kellner, M.P.H.

Richard C. Friedman, M.D. Thomas H. Lyman-Fenn, M.A.

Donald W. Helbig, M.D. Mohammed H. Matthews, M.P.H.

Maudene Nelson, M.S. (Institute of Human

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Nutrition) Norman L. Weatherby, M.A.

Sociomedical Sciences

Professors

Jack Elinson (Acting Division Head). B.S., College of the City of New York, 1937; M.A.,

George Washington, 1946 Denise B. Kandel (in Psychiatry). B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1952; M.A., Columbia, 1953; Ph.D.,

1960

Clinical Professor

Joseph Marbach (also Dentistry). B.A., Drew, 1956; D.D.S., Pennsylvania, 1960

Associate Professor

John L. Colombotos. B.A., Columbia, 1949; M.A., 1952; Ph.D., Michigan, 1961

Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Ruth G. Bennett. B.A., Brooklyn, 1955; Ph.D., Columbia, 1962

PUBLIC HEALTH 131

Research Scientists

Ann F. Brunswick. B.A., Hunter, 1946; M.A., Clark, 1947; Ph.D., Columbia, 1976 Mata K. Nikias. D.D.S., Athens, 1953; M.P.H., Columbia, 1960; Ph.D., 1967

Senior Research Associate

Paul W. Haberman. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1948; M.B.A., New York University, 1961

Assistant Professor

Kazuo Yamaguchi. B.S., Tokyo, 1971; M.A., Chicago, 1979; Ph.D., 1981

Assistant Professor of Anthropology

Robert F. Wasserstrom. B.A., Harvard, 1970; M.A., 1973; Ph.D., 1977

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Margery Braren. M.A., Columbia, 1963; Ph.D., 1971

Sally Guttmacher. B.S., Wisconsin, 1963

Matthew A. Rosen. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.A., 1969; M.Phil., 1975; Ph.D., 1979

Assistant Professor of Clinical Social Sciences

Carol C. Schwartz. B.S., Columbia. 1962; M.S.N., Yale, 1965; M.Phil., 1967; Ph.D., 1969

Assistant Clinical Professor

James A. Lipton. D.D.S., Columbia, 1971; M.Phil., 1974; Ph.D., 1980

Associate Research Scientists

Stanley Fisher. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1949; M.S., Columbia, 1955; Ph.D.,

1977 Lawrence Krasnoff. B.A., City University of New York, 1969; Ph.D., 1979 Carole S. Vance. B.A., Hunter, 1968; Ph.D., Columbia, 1970

Senior Research Associate

Paul S. Haberman. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1948; M.B.A., New York University, 1961

LECTURERS INSTRUCTOR

Andrew J. Gordon, Ph.D., M.P.H. Rochelle Kern, Ph.D., M.P.H.

Eric Josephson, Ph.D.

Thomas Tarn, M.P.H., Ph.D. STAFF ASSOCIATES

Peter A. Messeri, M.Phil.

RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Victoria Raveis, M.P.H.

Athilia E. Siegmann, M.S. Carmen N. Velez-Santori, M.Phil.

Tropical Medicine

Professors

Dickson D. Despommier (Parasitology) (also Microbiology). B.S., Fairleigh Dickinson, 1962; M.S., Columbia, 1964; Ph.D., Notre Dame, 1967

132 PUBLIC HEALTH RADIOLOGY

Michael Katz (also Pediatrics). B.A., Pennsylvania, 1949; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1956; M.S., Columbia, 1963

Associate Professor

Philip A. D'Alesandro (Division Head) (Parasitology) (also Microbiology). B.S., Rutgers, 1952; M.S., 1954; Ph.D., Chicago, 1958

Adjunct Associate Professor

John D. Frame. B.A., Wheaton, 1938; M.D., Northwestern, 1943

Assistant Professor

Susanne Holmes Giannini (Parasitology) (also Microbiology). B.A., New York University, 1966; Ph.D., Rutgers, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professor

Martin G. Blechman. B.S, George Washington, 1949; M.S., Columbia, 1953; M.D., Jefferson, 1957

INSTRUCTOR

Chung C. Wang, M.D.

Faculty Members Not Affiliated with Specific Divisions

Professors

Sami A. Hashim (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Beirut, 1950; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1955

Adjunct Professor

Myron Brin (Public Health Nutrition). B.S., Cornell, 1947; M.N.S., 1948; Ph.D., Harvard, 1951

SENIOR STAFF ASSOCIATE Vicki R. Ashton, M.S.W.

Radiology

James Picker Professor and Chairman

David H. Baker. M.D., Boston, 1951.

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

Philip O. Alderson. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1966; M.D., 1970 Walter E. Berdon. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., 1955 Chu Huai Chang. M.D., St. John's (Shanghai), 1944

Zang-Hee Cho (Physics). B.S., Seoul National (Korea), 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D., Uppsala, 1966

RADIOLOGY 133

Kent Ellis. M.D., Yale, 1950

Eric J. Hall (Physics). D.Phil., Oxford, 1962; D.Sc, 1978

Sadek Hilal. M.D., Cairo, 1955

Harald H. Rossi (Physics). Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1942

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Carmia Borek. B.S., M.S., Ph.D., Weizmann Institute (Israel), 1967

Professors of Clinical Radiology

Frieda Feldman. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., 1957

Donald L. King. B.A., Stanford, 1956; M.D., Columbia, 1960

Eric C. Martin. B.A., Oxford, 1963; M.A., 1967; M.D., St. Thomas (London), 1967

Ralph Schlaeger. ^ B.S., Wisconsin, 1942; M.D., 1945

Adjunct Professors

Victor P. Bond (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., California (Berkeley), 1943; M.D., California

(San Francisco), 1945; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1952 Simon Larach. Ph.D., Princeton, 1955

Associate Professor

Jeffrey H. Newhouse. B.A., Princeton, 1963; M.D., Harvard, 1967

Associate Professors of Clinical Radiology

Thane Asch. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955 John H. Austin. B.A., Harvard, 1961; M.D., Yale, 1965 Peter D. Esser (Radiation Biophysics). B.A. Brown, 1961; M.S., Adelphi, 1964; Ph.D.,

1971 Rashid Fawwaz. M.D., American (Beirut), 1960; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1968 Monique C. Katz. B.A., Vassar, 1959; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1963 Edward L. Nickoloff. B.S., Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1965; M.S., New Hampshire,

1968; Sc.D., Johns Hopkins, 1977 Alan J. Silver. B.A., Harvard, 1967; M.D., Rochester, 1973

Adjunct Associate Professor

Lawrence A. Shepp. B.S., Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, 1958; M.A., Princeton, 1960; Ph.D., 1960

Associate Clinical Professors

Joan Eliasoph. B.A., Hunter, 1946; M.D., New York University, 1949 Karen S. Fountain. B.A., Northern State (South Dakota); M.D., Maryland, 1972 Sundara R. Ganti. M.B., B.S., Guntur Medical College (India), 1967; M.D., 1967 Kevin L. Macken. M.D., National (Ireland), 1947 Paul Sane. M.D., Bucharest, 1950

Research Scientists

Charles R. Geard (Radiation Biophysics). B.A.S., Melbourne, 1960; M.Sc, Tasmania, 1969;

Ph.D., Australian National, 1973 Jong-Beom Ra. Ph.D., Advanced Institute of Science Technology (Korea), 1983

134 RADIOLOGY

Assistant Professors

Sara Abramson. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1967; M.D., Mt. Sinai, 1971

Kaaren N. Bergquist. B.S., Wisconsin State, 1962; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1968

Elliott Fanchuken. B.A., New York University, 1971; M.D., State University of New York

(Buffalo), 1975 Susan Frank. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1972; M.D., Columbia, 1977 David C. Grant. M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1975

Karen Laffey. B.A., Bryn Mawr, 1968; M.Phii, Yale, 1971; Ph.D., 1974; M.D., 1977 Arthur Liskow. B.S., Cincinnati, 1963; M.D., 1967 Andrew Arthur Maudsley. B.S.C., Nottingham, 1973; Ph.D., 1976 Michel E. Mawad. M.D., French University (Beirut), 1976 Elizabeth W. O'Connell. B.A., New York University 1973; M.D., New York Medical

College, 1976 Ahalya Premkumar. M.D., Bombay, 1977

Joel M. Rosen. B.S., Brooklyn, 1971; M.D., Cornell, 1975; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1977 David W. Seldin. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1968; M.S., Colorado, 1970;

M.D., New York University, 1975 Lorraine G. Shapeero. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1964; M.D., California (San Francisco),

1968 Robert E. Sibley. B.S., Notre Dame, 1974; M.D., Columbia, 1978 Rolando D. Singson. B.S., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1965; M.D., 1970

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Herman W. Lubetsky. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1948; M.D., Geneva, 1953 Richard James Riley. M.S., New York University, 1977; Ph.D., Cornell, 1983 Theodore Sheng-Tao Wang. Ph.D., Maryland, 1964

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Bruce J. Biavati (Radiation Biophysics). B.A., Columbia, 1953; M.A., 1955; Ph.D., 1964

Assistant Clinical Professors

Harry Agress, Jr. B.A., Tufts, 1968; M.D., 1972

Gregory Marc Carsen. B.A., Oberlin, 1965; M.D., State University of New York (Down- state), 1969

David A. Follett. B.A., Harvard, 1959; M.D., Tufts, 1954

Shelby J. Galloway. B.A., Catawba, 1961; M.D., Bowman-Gray, 1965

Richard Gold. B.A., Tufts, 1965; M.D., 1969

William M. Griffin. B.S., Notre Dame, 1958; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1962

Harvey L. Hecht. B.A., Amherst, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962

Michael J. Marchese. B.A., New York University, 1976; M.D., Baylor, 1979

Steven D. Richman. B.A., Columbia, 1967; M.D., 1971

Robert Silbey. B.A., Columbia, 1952; M.D., 1955

Associate Research Scientists

Myles Barry Astor. B.A., Columbia, 1976; M.A., 1981; M.Phil., Ph.D., 1982

Richard P. Bird. B.S., Colorado, 1960; M.S., 1962; Ph.D., California (Berkeley), 1972

Daniel S. Choy. B.A., Columbia, 19U; M.D., 1949

Paul E. Goldhagen. B.S., Maryland, 1967; Ph.D., Princeton, 1973

Tom K. Hei. B.Sc., Wisconsin, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1974

Paul J. Kliauga. B.S., Chicago, 1958; Ph.D., New York University, 1974

RADIOLOGY 135

Stephen Marino. B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1968; M.S., Polytechnic Institute of

New York, 1972 Gerhard Randers-Pehrson. B.S., Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1966; M.D., Maryland,

1979 Laurie Roizin Towle. B.S., Marymount, 1967; M.S., New York University, 1971 Peter M. S. Wai. B.A., Augustana, 1970; M.S., Columbia, 1973; D.Eng.Sci., 1977 Marco Zaider. M.S., Bucharest, 1968; Ph.D., Tel Aviv, 1976

SPECIAL LECTURER INSTRUCTORS (continued)

William B. Seaman, M.D. Jeanne R. Schwartz, M.D.

Philip W. Silverberg, M.D. RESEARCH ASSOCIATE Robert Smith, M.D.

Michael L. Freeman, Ph.D. Richard Taus, M.D.

Arthur S. Weisel, M.D. INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY

Barbara Binkert, M.D. ^^^'^-^ ^'^'^^ ASSOCIATES

Alfred G. Gladstone, M.D. Rudolph Gand

Pearl I. Herskovitz, M.D. Howard Simon, Ph.D. Thomas E. Moore, M.D.

John Clancy Powers, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Louis E. Rambler, M.D. Gary Walter Johnson, A.A.S.

At Mary Imogens Bassett Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Harry Rodman Hartman. M.D., Yale, 1959

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Stephen W. Nagy. Ph.D., Connecticut, 1959

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY Rajendrakumar Dalai, M.D. Katherine Lloyd, M.D. Peter T. Wright, M.D.

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professor of Clinical Radiology

Judith Rose. B.A., Barnard, 1960; M.D., Women 's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1964

Associate Clinical Professor

Thodore R. Stent. B.A., Talladega, 1944; M.D., Meharry, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Jeanne Armstrong. B.A., Mt. Holyoke, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1952

Christopher A. Johnson. B.A., Howard, 1943; M.D., 1947

Laurencia B. Regalado. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1957

Fred Van Natta. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1964; M.D., California (San Francisco), 1968

136 RADIOLOGY

Assistant Clinical Professors

Norma M. Aquino. M.D., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1964 Alice N. Francisco. A.A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1956; M.D., 1961 Lawrence C. Roach. B.A., Saskatchewan (Canada), 1958; M.D., 1960 Yuthana Samroengraja. M.D., Chuhngkorn Hospital Medical School, 1965 Abdulhamid R. Vazir. M.D., Bombay, 1942

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL RADIOLOGY Muhammad Anwar, M.B., B.S. Chomyong K. Charoenkul, M.D. Giles M. Hendrick, M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Assistant Professor of Clinical Radiology

David L. Bloom. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., Tufts, 1955

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professor of Clinical Radiology

Guy D. Potter. M.D., Chicago, 1956; B.Sc, 1957

Clinical Professors

Kuo-York Chynn. B.S., National Tung-Chi (Shanghai), 1945; M.D., 1949; M.S., St. Louis,

1954 Virginia Kanick. B.A., Barnard, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Jeanne W. Baer. B.S., Connecticut, 1960; M.D., Columbia, 1964 John T. Hsu. M.D., National Defense (Taiwan), 1957 Leonard M. Liegner. B.A., New York University, 1941; M.D., 1944 Efthimios C. Spyropoulos. M.D., Athens, 1948

Assistant Professors of Clinical Radiology

Andrew J. DeRogatis. M.D., Rutgers, 1975

Carol L. Hilfer. B.A., Barnard, 1967; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1971

Anita G. Moallem. B.S., Brooklyn, 1960; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1964

William I. Shaw. B.A., Washington and Jefferson, 1958; M.D., Pittsburgh, 1962

Alvaro Vallejo. M.D., Del Valle (Colombia), 1967

Assistant Clinical Professors

Manoochehr Abiri. M.D., Teheran, 1972

Ina A. Altman. B.S., Brooklyn, 1956; M.D., Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania,

1960 Benjamin Bashist. B.S., Brooklyn, 1972; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1975 David S. Marsden. Ph.D., Jefferson, 1968

RADIOLOGY REHABILITATION MEDICINE 137

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

RADIOLOGY Theodore Serban, M.D.

Sidney D. Bogart, M.D. Ok Son-Yong, M.D.

Madhuri Kirpekar, M.D. Susan M. Tuck, M.D. Hi-Jung Pyun, M.D.

Sabino J. Rizzo, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

Kenneth T. Rogers, M.D. Morris Hodara, M.S.

Rehabilitation Medicine

Simon Baruch Professor and Chairman

John A. Downey. M.D., Manitoba, 1954; D.Phil., Christ Church (Oxford), 1962; F.R.C.P.

Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Stanley J. Myers. B.A., New York University, 1957; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1961

Associate Professor

Lucien J. Cote (also Neurology). B.S., Vermont, 1951; M.D., 1954

Associate Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Erwin G. Gonzalez. B.A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1962; M.D., 1967

Senior Research Associate

Leon T. Kremzner. Ph.D., Rutgers, 1955

Adjunct Assistant Professor

Larry J. Crawshaw. B.A., California (Los Angeles), 1964; Ph.D., 1970

Assistant Clinical Professors

Cayetano C. Co. A.A., Santo Tomas (Philippines), 1949; M.D., 1954

Antonio Cocchiarella. M.D., Bari (Italy), 1 953

Francis J. Foca. B.S., Fordham, 1957; M.D., Bologna (Italy), 1966

Carolina O. McCagg. B.A., Barnard, 1962; M.D., Yale, 1966

Jonathan R. Moldover. B.A., Trinity (Connecticut), 1970; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Damyanti G. Moorjani (also Pediatrics). B.S., Bombay, 1953; M.D., Grant (Bombay), 1957

Anthony B. Porcelli. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Boston, 1955

Naomi L. Turner. B.A., San Francisco Xavier (Bolivia), 1948; M.D., 1956

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

REHABILITATION MEDICINE ^lenn F. Hutnick, B. A.

Alfred Hess, D.O. Patricia A. Richards, M.D. (at Blythedale Robert Stone, M.S. (at Blythedale Children's Children's Hospital)

Hospital)

Kathleen R. Watson, M.B., B.S. STAFF ASSOCIATE

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINCIAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Adrienne Falk Bergen, B.A., C.P.T. (at Blythedale Children's Hospital)

Daniel Eugene Lemons, M.S.

138 REHABILITATION MEDICINE

At Harlem Hospital

Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Albert D. Anderson (A. David Gurewitsch Professor). B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., Harvard, 1952

Associate Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Herbert L. Thornhill. B.S., Pittsburgh, 1951; M.D., Howard, 1955

Associate Clinical Professor

Yasoma B. Challenor. B.A., Hunter, 1 959; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1963

Assistant Clinical Professor

Wanda Brodzka. M.D., Academy of Medicine (Warsaw), 1954

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Louise Weiss, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Thomas Abraham, M.B., B.S. Joseph A. Malloy, M.D. Harriet Minor, M.A.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Ivan T. Donev, M.D. Harriett Minor, M.A.

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Iluminado C. Nebab, M.D.

Sandhya E. Zarapkar, Intermediate Sci.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Felicita E. Clare, B.S.

At Helen Hayes Hospital

Assistant Professors of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine

Arun Kuman Bhattacharyyan. Intermediate Sci., Bangabasi (Calcutta), 1950; M.D., Nilratan

Sirca Medical College (Calcutta), 1955 Sally Wisely. B.A., Radcliffe, 1955; M.D., Columbia, 1967

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Christine H. Beck, M.D.

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Barbara D. Hanley, M.S.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Wen-Ling L. Fan, M.D.

REHABILITATION MEDICINE 139

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Assistant Clinical Professor

Lucille T. Pai. M.D., Woman 's Christian Medical College (Shanghai), 1941

ASSOCIATE IN CLINICAL REHABILITATION MEDICINE

Ravi Raj Malpe, M.B., B.S.

Occupational Therapy

Associate Professor

Barbara Neuhaus (Acting Program Director). B.A., Keuka, 1950; O. T.R., Columbia, 1952; M.A., Columbia, 1960; Ed. D., 1980

Assistant Professors of Clinical Occupational Therapy

Adele C. Germaine. B.A., Connecticut College, 1969; M.S., O. T.R., Columbia, 1970 Gordon Williamson. B.A., Emory, 1968; M.S., Columbia, 1970; M. Phil., 1976; Ph.D., 1978

SPECIAL LECTURER INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

Marie Franciscus, M. A. OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

Janet Falk-Kessler, M.A.

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL Patricia A. Miller, M.A.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY Roberta Roth, M.S.W. Margaret Ann Brown, M.A.

Simme Cynkin, M.S. ^5^'?I'^^I?J,'!,^!£!iS'^i; Schone Pang, M.S.

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY Laurelee Hawkins, B.S. Frances Kraver, B.S.

Physical Therapy

Associate Professors

Ruth Dickinson (Program Director). B.S., Russell Sage, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1947 Althea M. Jones. B.S., Panzer College of Physical Education, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1972

Associate Professor of Clinical Physical Therapy

Bemadette Hecox. B.S., Columbia, 1968; M.A., 1973

Assistant Professor

Thomas J. Schmitz. B.S., State University of New York (Buffalo), 1972; M.S., Boston, 1974

140 REHABILITATION MEDICINE SURGERY

Assistant Professor of Clinical Physical Therapy

Mary Joan Day. 5.5., St. Louis, 1961; M.S., Pennsylvania, 1972

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL

PHYSICAL THERAPY PHYSICAL THERAPY

Theodore Corbitt, M.A. Linda Arslanian, B.S.

Patricia Sullivan, M.A. Andre Deloya, B.A.

Susan Makris Durfee, B.S. INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL Ann B. Edgar, B.S.

PHYSICAL THERAPY , r- oc

Barbara Freeman, B.S. Margaret Beyda, B.S. Ellen O'Neill, M.A.

Anne Hinricks, M.Ed. Marion Marx, M.A. Georgia Reidel, B.S.

Surgery

Valentine Mott Professor, Johnson and Johnson Distinguished Professor and Chairman

Keith Reemstma. B.S., Idaho State, 1945; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1949

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professors

R. Peter Altman (Schullinger Professor of Pediatric Surgery) (also Pediatrics). B.A., Colgate,

1955; M.S., Rochester, 1958; M.D., New York Medical College, 1961 Frank Gump. B.A., Harvard, 1951; M.D., New York University, 1955 David V. Habif (Morris and Rose Milstein Professor). B.S., Columbia, 1936; M.D., 1939 Mark A. Hardy. B.A., Columbia, 1958; M.D., Albert Einstein, 1962 Frederic P. Herter (Hugh Auchincloss Professor). B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., 1944 Thomas C. King. B.A., Utah, 1950; M.D., 1954, M.A., Missouri, 1963 John M. Kinney. B.A., Denison, 1943; M.D., Harvard, 1946 John B. Price, Jr. M.A., Texas, 1948; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1950

Professor of Pathology

Soldano Ferrone. M.D., Milan (Italy), 1964; Ph.D., 1971

Professor of Clinical Pathology

Nicole Suciu-Foca. B.S., Bucharest, 1959; M.S., 1960; Ph.D., 1965

Professors of Clinical Surgery

Frederick O. Bowman, Jr. B.A., North Carolina, 1948; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1952

Kenneth A. Forde. B.S., City College (New York), 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1959

James R. Malm. B.A., Princeton, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1956

Alfred M. Markowitz. B.A., New York University, 1948; M.D., Washington (St Louis),

1952 Arthur B. Voorhees, Jr. B.A., Virginia, 1943; M.D., Columbia, 1946

SURGERY 141

Clinical Professor

Bashir Ahmad Zikria. B.S., George Washington, 1954; M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1958

Associate Professors

Paul Lo Gerfo. B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1961; M.S., 1963; M.D., State

University of New York (Upstate), 1967 Henry M. Spotnitz. B.A., Harvard, 1962; M.D., Columbia, 1966

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgery

Joseph A. Buda. B.A., Columbia, 1951; M.D., Cornell, 1955

Alfred Jaretzki III. B.A., Harvard, 1941; M.D., 1944

Ivo P. Janecka. M.D., Charles (Prague), 1965

Francis C. Symonds, Jr. B.A., Princeton, 1947; M.D., Columbia, 1951

Associate Clinical Professors

Robert G. Bertsch. B.A., Carleton, 1953; M.D., Columbia, 1957

David Bregman. B.A., New York University, 1961; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1965 David M. Ju. M.D., National Medical College (Shanghai), 1944; Med.Sc.D., Columbia,

1954 Sven Kister. B.A., Dartmouth, 1955; M.D., Harvard, 1958 George C. Peck. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1949; M.D., Maryland, 1953 John N. Schullinger. B.A., Princeton, 1951; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Associate Professor of Clinical Dentistry

Steven Roser. B.A., Middlebury, 1964; D.M.D., Harvard 1968; M.D., 1972

Research Scientist in Biochemistry

David Elwyn. B.A., Columbia, 1941; Ph.D., 1950

Assistant Professors

Norman E. Hugo. B.A., Williams, 1955; M.D., Cornell, 1959

Mary H. McGrath. B.A., New Rochelle, 1966; M.D., St. Louis, 1970

Roman Nowygrod. B.A., Harvard, 1966; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Eric A. Rose. B.A., Columbia, 1971; M.D., 1975

Charles J. H. Stoler. B.A., Washington (St. Louis), 1970; M.D., Georgetown, 1974

George J. Todd. B.S., lona, 1970; M.D., Pennsylvania State, 1974

Michael Treat. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1971; M.D., Jefferson, 1976

Collin J. Weber. B.A., Princeton, 1967; M.D., Columbia, 1955

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry

Irving Goodman. B.A., Colorado, 1939; Ph.D., 1944

142 SURGERY

Assistant Clinical Professors

Paul H. Gerst. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., 1952

Leif O. Holgersen. B.A., Taylor, 1960; M.D., New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry,

1965 Peter S. Liebert. M.D., Harvard, 1962

Associate Research Scientists

Robert James Foster. B.E., Cooper Union, 1973; M.S., Columbia, 1974; Sc.D., 1982 Shanta M. Modak. Ph.D., Haffkine Institute (Bombay), 1969

SPECIAL LECTURERS INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Harold G. Barker, M.D. Harold M. Bruck, M.D.

Carl R. Feind, M.D. Sherman M. Bull, M.D.

William A. Gardner, M.D. Howard Greisler, M.D.

Thomas Santulli, M.D. Leslie Mark Kutcher, M.D.

Philip D. Wiedel, M.D. Mark David Sherman, M.D.

Charles A. Slanetz, M.D.

LECTURERS James S. Todd, M.D. Shivaji B. Bhonslay, M.D. George Escher, M.D.

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL STAFF ASSOCIATES

SURGERY Thomas J. Hickey, B.S.

Vincent W. Ansanelli, M.D. Chihiro Iga, M.D.

Robert G. Blabey, M.D. Esther Meyer, M.A.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Professor of Clinical Surgery

David A. Blumenstock. B.A., Union (Schenectady), 1949; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Clinical Professor

John E. Olson. B.A., Kansas, 1953; M.D, 1956

Associate Clinical Professor

Rodman D. Carter (in Urology). B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

James Bordley IV. B.A., Yale, 1965; M.D., Columbia, 1970

Patrick Allen Dietz. B.A., Holy Cross, 1966; B.M.Sci., Dartmouth, 1968; M.D., Harvard,

1970 Roger W. MacMillan HI. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1961; M.D., Columbia, 1965

Assistant Clinical Professors

Edward J. Carey, Jr. B.A., Harvard, 1954; M.D., Cornell, 1958 Webster J. Stayman. B.S., St. Lawrence, 1966; M.D., Jefferson, 1970

SURGERY 143

At Harlem Hospital

Associate Professors of Clinical Surgery

Barbara Barlow. B.A., New York University, 1946; D.D.S., Columbia, 1950; M.D., 1953 Harold P. Freeman. B.A., Catholic, 1954; M.D., Howard, 1958

Associate Clinical Professors

David M. Carberry. Ph.D., Providence, 1947; M.D., Jefferson, 1951

Robert F. Morton. M.D., Meharry, 1944

John W. Parker, Jr. B.A., Fisk, 1942; M.D., Meharry, 1945

Assistant Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology

Lee David Eisenberg. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1967; M.D., State University of New York (Downstate), 1971

Assistant Professors of Clinical Surgery

Alden George Cockburn. B.S., City College (New York), 1970; M.D., Tufts, 1974 Ganepola A. Ganepola. B.S., Kyoto, 1966; M.D., 1967 Ferdinand A. Ofodile. B.S., Northwestern, 1964; M.D., 1968 Mohamad H. Parsa. B.S., Teheran, 1957; M.D., 1963

Assistant Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery

Shearwood J. McClelland. B.A., Princeton, 1969; M.D., Columbia, 1974

Assistant Clinical Professors

Salvatore G. Cinque. B.S., College of the City of New York, 1943; M.D., Loyola, 1946

Rajunder P. Gandhi. M.B., B.S., Institute of Medicine (Mandalay), 1966

James E. C. Norris. B.A., Hampton Institute, 1953; M.D., Case Western Reserve, 1957

Ruben Oropeza. B.S., Mexico, 1948; M.D., 1955

Carlton E. Patrick. M.D., University of the Saar (Hamburg, Germany), 1957

Assistant Clinical Professor of Neurological Surgery

Robert W. Schick. B.A., Columbia, 1948; M.D., New York Medical College, 1952

Assistant Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology

Ransford Newman. M.B., B.S., London, 1960; F.R.C.S., Edinburgh, 1968

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES (continued) INSTRUCTORS (continued)

Malcolm Moley, M.D. Edoardo Giuliani, M.D.

Roger Antoine, M.D. pig^re G. Van Bockstaele, Robert W. Holtzman, M.D.

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL ^'D- Avta S. Josen, M.D.

NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY Bamett Miller, M.D.

Michael Rapak M D INSTRUCTORS IN clinical Max Yergan, M.D.

•^ ' SURGERY

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL Deodatta V. Bendre, M.D.

SURGERY Egel Francois, M.D. INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL

Matthew D. Branche, M.D. Robert Leon Gibson, M.B., NEUROSURGERY

Urbano K. Guarin, M.D. B.S. George V. DiGiacinto, M.D.

144 SURGERY

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY OTOLARYNGOLOGY UROLOGY

Jacqueline Emmanuel, Hyun T. Cho, M.D. Rex O. Ajayi, M.D.

M.D. Ellsworth Frye, M.D. Arthur Rouse, M.D.

William L. King, M.D. Kenneth Garay, M.D. Caleb Medley, Jr., M.D.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery

Ames Lawrence Filippone. B.A., Cornell, 1950; M.D., 1953

At Overlook Hospital

Clinical Professor

Richard W. Brenner. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958

Associate Clinical Professors

David Befeler. B.A., Columbia, 1955; M.D., 1959 Bruce J. Brener. B.A., Yale, 1962; M.D., Harvard, 1966 Robert Specht. B.A., Princeton, 1944; M.D., Columbia, 1946

Assistant Clinical Professors

John H. Cooper. B.S., Lawrence, 1947; M.B.A., Chicago, 1949; M.D., 1954

Douglas M. Costabile. B.A., Muhlenberg, 1946; M.D., Geneva, 1951

John Joseph Hudock. B.S., Northwestern, 1944; M.D., 1948

Daniel L. Moore. M.D., Johns Hopkins, 1958

John V. Triolo. M.S., Rochester, 1948; M.D., Long Island College oi Medicine, 1941

Charles J. Wittmann. B.A., Princeton, 1958; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1962

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES (continued)

SURGERY Saverio J. Panzarino, M.D.

Robert E. Knapp, M.D. Morton Perkoff, M.D.

Thomas Logio, M.D. Jerome Spivack, M.D.

Charles Loguda, M.D. E_ Bruce Whitesell, M.D. Jerrold Lozner, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Professors of Clinical Surgery

J. William Littler. B.S., Duke, 1938; M.D., 1942

Richard B. Stark. B.A., Stanford, 1936; M.D., Cornell, 1941

Walter Wichem. B.S., Mt. Union, 1942; M.D., Harvard, 1945

Clinical Professor

W. Graham Knox. B.A., Columbia, 1939; M.D., 1942

SURGERY 145

Associate Professor

John G. Krai. M.A., Goteberg (Sweden), 1961; M.D., 1967; Ph.D., 1976

Associate Professor of Microbiology

George A. Hashim. Ph.D., Columbia, 1967

Associate Clinical Professors

Richard G. Eaton. B.S., Franklin and Marshall, 1951; M.D., Pennsylvania, 1955

Joseph Ford. B.A., Harvard, 1942; M.D., Columbia, 1945

John E. Hutchinson. B.S., Moorehouse, 1953; M.D., Meharry, 1957

Robert E. McCabe. B.A., Williams, 1948; M.D., Cornell, 1953

Robert E. Miller. B.A., New York University, 1953; M.D., State University of New York

(Downstate), 1957 Howard R. Nay. B.A., Virginia Military Institute, 1952; M.D., Columbia, 1956 James B. Rodgers. B.A., Virginia, 1944; M.D., 1948 Edward G. Stanley-Brown. M.D., Pennsylvania, 1948

Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery

William G. Ramey. B.A., Virginia, 1970; M.D., 1973

Assistant Clinical Professors

Peter A. Bossart. B.A., Muhlenberg, 1947; M.D., Cornell, 1951 Thomas Dailey. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Cornell, 1961 Clayton R. DeHaan. B.S., Florida, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Robert T. Edmunds. B.A., Harvard, 1946; M.D., Columbia, 1951 Paul D. Harris. B.A., Princeton, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1958 Conrad G. Lattes. B.S., Swarthmore, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1963 James A. MacDonald. B.A., Princeton, 1948; M.D., Columbia, 1950 Haroutane A. Mekhjian. B.S., American (Beirut), 1961; M.D., 1965 Robert J. Mulcare. B.A., Princeton, 1957; M.D., Columbia, 1961 Carl S. Oakman. B.A., Harvard, 1938; M.D., Tufts, 1943 James H. Terry, Jr. B.S., Arizona, 1949; M.D., Columbia, 1953 Chin Bor Yeoh. B.A., Yale, 1953; M.D., Harvard, 1957

INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS (continued)

^^^^^^ Farid J. Khoury, M.D.

Arnold H. Belgraier, M.D. Dianne R. Lorieo, M.D.

Charles R. Blair, M.D. Stephen G. Lynn, M.D.

Gregory W. Brabbee, M.D. Richard A. Marks, M.D.

Peter B. Cinelli, M.D. Walter H. Stingle, M.D.

Hiram Sedwick Cody III, M.D. Paul I. Tomljanovich, M.D.

Clarence A. Dunn, Jr., M.D. Hiroshi Washio, M.D.

Peter B. Fodor, M.D. George J. Zambetti, Jr., M.D. Philip E. Gordon, M.D. Joshua M. Kaplan, M.D.

Richard H. Karpinski, M.D. STAFF ASSOCIATE

John J. Keyser, M.D. Mikio Kamiyama, Ph.D.

146 UROLOGY

Urology

John K. Lattimer Professor and Chairman

Carl A. Olsson. B.A., Bowdoin, 1959; M.D., Boston, 1963

At Presbyterian Hospital

Professor of Clinical Urology

Ralph J. Veenema. B.A., Calvin, 1952; M.D., Jefferson, 1945

Associate Professors

Jerry G. Blaivas. B.A., Tufts, 1964; M.D., 1968

Ralph De Vere White. B. Ch., B.A. O., University College (Dublin), 1964; M.D., 1970

Associate Professor of Clinical Pathology

Myron Tannenbaum. B.S., New York University, 1952; M.S., 1955; Ph.D., 1957; M.D., Chicago, 1961

Associate Professors of Clinical Urology

Peter J. Puchner. B.A., Carleton, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962 Nicholas A. Romas. B.A., Colgate, 1958; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Associate Clinical Professors

Stanley B. Braham. B.A., Columbia, 19U; M.D., 1947 Frank W. Longo. B.S., Maryland, 1951; M.D., 1955

Myron S. Roberts. B.A., Syracuse, 1950; M.D., State University of New York (Upstate), 1954

Assistant Professors

Minh Chi Nguyen Huu. M.Sc., Technical (West Berlin), 1975; Ph.D., Max-Planck Institut,

1977 Harris M. Nagler. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1971; M.D., Temple, 1975

Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology

Philip Tomashefsky. Ph.D., New York University, 1969

Assistiint Professors of Clinicsd Urology

John D. Birkoff. B.A., Harvard, 1964; M.D., Columbia, 1969 Terry W. Hensle. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1964; M.D., Cornell, 1968

Assistant Clinical Professors

Peter N. De Sanctis. B.A., New York University, 1952; M.D., Boston, 1962 J. Timothy Donovan. M.D., New York Medical College, 1948 Louis J. Dougherty. B.A., Yale, 1950; M.D., Cornell, 1954

UROLOGY 147

John P. Grant. B.A., Amherst, 1954; M.D., Columbia, 1962

Michael H. Wechsler. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1961; M.D., St Louis, 1965

ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATES

UROLOGY JohnKallos,B.Sc.

Leonard J. Rudin, M.D. Walter King, Ph D.

Charles E. Umhey, Jr., M.D.

STAFF ASSOCIATE [jNSJRUCTORSINCUNICAL Ralph Buttyan, Ph.D.

Kevin E. Burbige, M.D. Richard Kroll, M.D.

At Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital

Associate Clinical Professor of Surgery

Rodman D. Carter. B.A., Harvard, 1950; M.D., Columbia, 1954

INSTRUCTOR IN CLINICAL UROLOGY Bruce MacDonald, M.D.

At Overlook Hospital

Assistant Clinical Professor

Robert R. White. B.A., Amherst, 1949; M.D., Rochester, 1954

ASSISTANTS IN CLINICAL ASSOCIATES IN CLINICAL

UROLOGY UROLOGY

Joel S. Cohen, M.D. Kenneth L. Day, M.D.

Malcolm Schwartz, D.O. Pascal A. Pironti, M.D.

Joseph S. Ritter, M.D.

Morey Wosnitzer, M.D.

At St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center

Associate Clinical Professor

Joseph N. Ward. M.B., B.Ch., University College (Dublin), 1949

Assistant Clinical Professors

William J. Nelson. B.A., Williams, 1945; M.D., New York Medical College, 1946 Robert D. Wickham. B.A., Drew, 1947; M.D, Albany Medical College, 1952

ASSISTANT IN CLINICAL INSTRUCTORS IN CLINICAL

UROLOGY UROLOGY

Damir Velcek, M.D. Waleed G. Maloof, M.D.

Alexander Sotiropoulos, M.D. ASSOCIATES IN CUNICAL jan,gs \fj Vastola, M.D.

UROLOGY

William Reed Pitts, Jr., M.D. Arumbi P. Subramaniam, M.D. Pellegrino J. Tozzo, M.D.

Centers and Institutes

Center for Neurobiology and Behavior

INSTRUCTOR

Tsunao Saitoh, Ph.D.

Comprehensive Cancer Center

STAFF ASSOCIATES Cecil Mark Eppler, Ph.D. John H. Martin, Ph.D. Jean Louise McDowell, B.S

General Clinical Research Center

STAFF ASSOCIATES

Thomas N. Lymein-Fenn, B.A.

Priscilla RandaU, M.P.H.

Erik Raymond Rowberg, B.S.

Sarah Maria Santana, M.P.H., Dr.P.H.

Weng Kong Sung, Ph.D.

Sergievsky Center

Associate Research Scientists

Oliver F. Chadwick. B.A, Oxford, 1968; Ph.D., University College (London), 1972 Jennie K. Kline. B.A, Chicago, 1972; M.S., Columbia, 1974; M.Phil., 1975; Ph.D., 1977

STAFF ASSOCIATES

John L. Kiely, B.A., M.A., M.Phil.

Stephen K.C. Ng, M.D.

International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction

Assistant Professor of Clinical Public Health

Michele G. Shedlin, M.A.

Associate Research Scientists

James M. AUman. B.A., Rutgers, 1965; M.A., Harvard, 1972; Ph.D., 1973

Donald J. Lauro. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1966; M.A., 1971; Ph.D., Australian National,

1979 Eugene Martin Weiss. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1963; M.P.H., 1965; Ph.D., Michigan,

1972

RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Jane Bertrand, Ph.D. James R. Foreit, Ph.D.

150 CENTERS AND INSTITUTES

Institute for Cancer Research

Associate Research Scientists

Sebastiano Gattoni. M.D., Naples, 1972

James F. Jackson. B.A., Princeton, 1974; Ph.D., Edinburgh, 1977

STAFF ASSOCIATES Vladimir Axelrod, Ph.D. Joseph M. Backer, Ph.D. Ranjit Banejee, Ph.D. Paul Kirschmeier, Ph.D. Eleanor Miele, Ph.D.

Institute of Human Nutrition

Associate Research Scientist

Robin Marks Kaufman. B.S., ComeU, 1976; M.S., Tufts, 1979; Ph.D., 1981

LECTURERS STAFF ASSOCIATE

Neville Colman, M.D., Ph.D. Maudene Nelson, M.S.

Peter Hakim, M.P.A. Robert Karp, M.A. Ann Sullivan, Ph.D. Joseph R. Vasselli, Ph.D.

First-Year Postgraduate Appointments: Class of 1983

Aldea, Peter. Stanford University, Stanford, California. Plastic Surgery

Alonso, Jose. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Rehabilitation Medicine

Andersen, Rolf. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Arliss, Jeffrey. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. General Surgery Bar, Michael. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Barein, Syma. St. Luke's Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics/Gynecology Basner, Robert. Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Bauer, R. David. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Orthopedic

Surgery Beck, Marc. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Ben-Zvi, Jeffrey. St. Luke 's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Black, Alexander. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Blackwood, Alexander. University of California Hospitals, San Francisco, California. Pedi- atrics Blizzard, Victoria. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Bobella, Stephen. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Medicine Bonner, Matthew. Medical Center Hospital, University of Vermont, Burlington, Ver- mont. Medicine Boos, Steven. U.S. Air Force, Travis AFB, California. Pediatrics Boyle, Allyson. University of California, Davis, California. Medicine Boyle, Thomas. North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, New York. Medicine/

Radiology Breidbart, Scott. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Brill, David. Yale -New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Medicine Bush, James. Morristown Memorial Hospital, Morristown, New Jersey. Medicine/

Ophthalmology Cahill, Peter. Stanford University, Stanford, California. Urology Camacho, Victor. University of California, Davis, California. Anesthesiology Camerino, Vicki. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Transitional/Ear, Nose,

Throat Camuto, Patricia. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Surgery/

Ear, Nose, Throat Carpenter, Richard. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland. Pediatrics Carpenter, Susan. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland. Obstetrics/Gynecol- ogy Caselli, Richard. Mayo Graduate School of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota. Neurology Chalfin, Laura. Altoona Hospital, Altoona, Pennsylvania. Family Practice Chen, William. University of California Hospital, Los Angeles, California. Medicine Davidson, Peter. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Davis, Maris. New York University Veterans Administration Hospital, New York, New

York. Medicine Davitz, Michael. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Pathology Dillon, John. North Carolina Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Medicine Donnenberg, Michael. Baltimore City Hospitals, Baltimore, Maryland. Medicine Duralde, Xavier. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. General Surgery/Orthope- dics Durand, David. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pathology Dushay, Kevin. Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine

FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1983 153

Eaton, Bradford. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. General Surgery/Orthopedics Epner, Elliot. University of California, Irvine, California. Medicine Epstein, Wendy Keller. New York University Veterans Administration Hospital, New York,

New York. Medicine/Dermatology Erly, William. University of Colorado Affiliated Hospital, Denver, Colorado. Family Prac- tice Feind, Carl. St. Mary's Hospital, San Francisco, California. Psychiatry Felix, Alan. Mercy Hospital, San Diego, California. Transitional/Psychiatry Fiorito, Joseph. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Fisher, Margaret. Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. Medicine Flamm, Michael. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Fletcher, Christopher. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Anesthesiology Florakis, George. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Transitional/Ophthalmology Freilich, David. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Friedman, David. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Transitional/Radiology Gaines, Alan. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Garbowit, David. University of Alabama Medical Center, Birmingham, Alabama. Medi- cine Genecin, Paul. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Glatt, Aaron. Brookdale Hospital, Brooklyn, New York. Medicine Gliedman, Paul. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Goldberg, Neal. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Goldschmidt, Howard. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Goldstein, Michael. Morristown Memorial Hospital, Morristown, New Jersey. Medicine Gomez-Carrion, Yvonne. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics /Gyne- cology Green, Nancy. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Gresalfi, Thomas. Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Psychiatry Gutowski, Ted. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Hall, Walter. University Health Center Hospitals, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Surgery/

Neurosurgery Harris, David. Columbia University Center for Neurobiology and Behavior /Department of

Biochemistry, New York, New York. Research Fellowship Hawke, Mary. Baltimore City Hospitals, Baltimore, Maryland. Medicine Hirschfeld, Steven. University of California Hospitals, San Francisco, California. Pediat- rics Ingram, David. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia. Anesthesiology Joffe, Mark. Childrens Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pediatrics Jones, Leon. Virginia Mason Hospital, Seattle, Washington. Transitional/Radiology Kalb, Thomas. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Kamer, Russell. Long Island Jewish Hospital, New Hyde Park, New York. Medicine Kastelman, James. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Klapper, Robert. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. General Surgery/

Orthopedics Konecky, Alan. Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Kriger, Alberto. Childrens Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Pediatrics Lai-Goldman, Myla. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York,

New York. Medicine/Pathology Landry, Donald. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Landzberg, Joel. Vanderbilt University Affiliated Hospital, Nashville, Tennessee. Medi- cine Lederman, Seth. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine

154 FIRST-YEAR POSTGRADUATE APPOINTMENTS: CLASS OF 1983

Letsou, George. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. General

Surgery Linfield, Louis. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine/Psychiatry Lopez, Rafael. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Urology Luppescu, Neal. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Lustick, Martin. Childrens Hospital, Washington, D.C. Pediatrics

Lytton, William. University of Alabama Medical Center, Birmingham, Alabama. Medi- cine/Neurology MacFarlane, Michael. Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. General

Surgery/Urology Maloney, William. Stanford University, Stanford, California. Orthopedic Surgery Mandel, Michael. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York,

New York. Medicine Manley, John. M. I. Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, New York. Transitional/ Anesthesiol- ogy Mattathias, Daniel. Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. Pediatrics McCord, Mary. Babies Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Melfi, Robert. George Washington University, Washington, D.C. Medicine Munro, Virginia. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine/Psychiatry Neuberg, Gerald. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Okun, Alexander. Babies Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Ostrow, Steven. Hackensack Hospital, Hackensack, New Jersey. Transitional/Radiology Perlmutter, Jeffrey. George Washington University, Washington, D.C. Medicine Peterson, Mark. Nassau Hospital, Mineola, New York. Medicine/Radiology Pierson, Richard. University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Gen- eral Surgery Pollak, Emil. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (St. Luke's Division), New York, New

York. Medicine Pollak, Jeffrey. Morristown Memorial Hospital, Morristown, New Jersey. Medicine/

Radiology Quartararo, Christopher. University Hospital Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York. Anes- thesiology Quinn, Thomas. Morristown Memorial Hospital, Morristown, New Jersey. Medicine/

Anesthesiology Rampil, Ira. University of California Hospitals, San Francisco, California. Anesthesiology Randolph, Paula. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Obstetrics /Gynecology Retikas, Anthony. Cleveland Clinic Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. Diagnostic Radiology Rice, Louis. New York University Medical Center, New York, New York. Medicine Rich, Thomas. University Hospital, Stony Brook, New York. Medicine/Anesthesiology Ring, Wendy. Scenic General Hospital, Modesto, California. Family Practice Roberts, William. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Rochester, Carolyn. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Rosenthal, Jonathan. Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. Medicine Rovit, Adam. Mount Auburn Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Medicine/Ophthalmol- ogy Ruttenberg, Margaret. Yale -New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. Ob-

stetrics/Gynecology Sacks, Andrew. Millard Fillmore Hospital, Buffalo, New York. Medicine Sacks, Evan. Beth Israel Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Saver, Barry. University of California Hospitals, Los Angeles, California. Family Practice Schlesinger, Gail. Kaiser Foundation, San Francisco, California. Medicine Schoifet, Scott. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. General Surgery Segal, Michael. St. Louis Childrens Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri. Pediatrics/Neurology Shapiro, Matthew. Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine. Surgery/Orthopedics Simpson, Joseph. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, New York. Medicine

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 155

Smires, Harvey. St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center (Roosevelt Division), New York, New

York. General Surgery Smith, Ann. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Smith, Judith. Yale-New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, Connecticut. General

Surgery Starin, Lawrence. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. General Surgery Sullivan, John. Overlook Hospital, Summit, New Jersey. Emergency Medicine Tanenbaum, Gary. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. General Surgery Thoron, Louisa. Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, D.C. Medicine Vagelos, Randall. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Vande Wiele, Barbara. University of California Hospital, Los Angeles, California. General

Surgery Wang, Paul. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Wang, Timothy. Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri. Medicine Wasserman, Marcia. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Pediatrics Weinberger, Michael. St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Weinstein, Lee. Montefiore Hospital, Bronx, New York. Medicine

Weinstock, Martin. University Health Center Hospitals, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Medi- cine Weissman, Jane. Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, New York. Medicine Whitley, Barbara. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pathology Widom, Barbara. Stanford University, Stanford, California. Medicine Wilkens, James. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts. Medicine Wilner, Philip. The New York Hospital, New York, New York. Psychiatry Wimpfheimer, Miriam. NewYork University Veterans Administration Hospital, New York,

New York. Medicine Winter, Eric. Presbyterian Hospital, New York, New York. Surgery Wissler, Richard. Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, New York. Pathology Yolowitz, Greg. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylva- nia. Anesthesiology Yu, Leonard. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Gen- eral Surgery Zigelman, Charles. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, New York. Medicine

Student Roster: Class of 1984

Adkins, Elijah Stanton III Salisbury, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Alland, David New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Arato, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Union (Schenectady), 1980

Ashmead, Duffield Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Baez, Ana Luisa New York, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1980

Bannister, Kyra Heather Georgetown, Ct. B.A., Vermont, 1980

Barasch, Jonathan Matthew New York, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980

Belisle, James Thompson Babylon, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979

Bell, Robin Ellen New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1975

Berkower, Alan Stewart Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Middlebury, 1974; M.S. Yeshiva, 1978; Ph.D.,

1980 Booker, Gaile Michele Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Boschi, Alessandro Sebastian Port Chester, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Brem, Rachel Frydman New York, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1979 Brieff, David Ben Melville, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980 Brittis, Mary Ellen Yonkers, N.Y. B.S, Columbia, 1980 Brown, Michael Carlvan Yorktown Heights, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Cardenosa, Gilda New York, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1979 Chak, Amitabh New York, N.Y. B.S, Yale, 1978; M.S., 1979

156 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984

Chan, Stephen Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Chietero, Michael Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1980 Christopher, Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978 Clain, Michael Russell Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980 Coburn, Kenneth Doyle New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1980 Cohen, Sally Eisenberg Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Gaucher, 1964 Constantine, Sandra Mequon, Wi. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Desser, Terry S. Whitestone, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Di Franco, Matthew Joaquin New York, N.Y. B.A., California (Santa Cruz), 1979 Draga, Aspasia E. Malba, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Egnor, Michael Robert Catskill, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Fallon, Regis Francis Pittsburgh, Pa. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Fayter, Judith Ann Staten Island, N.Y. B.S., Pace, 1978 Fithian, Donald Coburn Bridgeton, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980 Florin, Cynthia Ann New York, N.Y. B.S., Grinnell, 1976 Ford, Jean Guillaume Long Island City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1978 Freeman, Phillip Sanford North Freeport, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1975 Gallay, Brian James Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Gewirtz, George Robert Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Goldberg, Mark Paul Chicago, II. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Goldstein, Jeffrey Alan Southfield, Mi. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Gorton, Christopher P. Nashua, N.H. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980 Goyal, Alok Kendal Park, N.J. B.S., Columbia, 1980 Graff, Wayne Brian Merrick, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980 Graham, Jeffrey Scott Summit, N.J. B.A., Williams, 1980 Greenbaum, Linda Ellen New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Guthrie, Ellen Hobson Hilton Head Island, S.C. B.A., Colorado, 1980 Haspel, Kenneth Lewis West Hartford, Ct. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980 Hibbard, Claire Alexandra Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979 Hsu, Ho-Wen Timonium, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1979 Hyll, Marsha Karin Green Brook, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1975 Ivey, Louis Albert Silver Springs, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Jackson, Byron A. Shreveport, La. B.A., New York University, 1980 Jeevanandam, Valluvan M. New Milford, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Johnson, Gregory Kent Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979 Johnston, Peter Shivers Stockton, N.J. B.A., Cornell, 1969; M.A., Columbia, 1972 Jules, Kethy Marie Elmhurst, N.Y. B.S., Marymount, 1980 Kao, Peter Nicholas Pound Ridge, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Karlin, Scott Marc Greenlawn, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980 Kaye, Katherine Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Kazim, Michael Riverdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Kellogg, Collins Frederick Croghan, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1977; M.A., Columbia, 1979 Kim, Anthony Hyoung Queens, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980 Kim, Kami Albany, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Kimball, Robert Owen Geneva, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1979 Krongrad, Arnon Harrington Park, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Ku, Andrew Bergenfield, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Lang, Thomas Philip Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 LaScala, Carlo Paul Port Jefferson, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980 Lattimer, Douglas Gary New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975; M.A., Columbia, 1978 Leibenhaut, Mark Harris Oceanside, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Levin, Neil Chevy Chase, Md. B.S.E.S., Tufts, 1980 Lewis, Allison Elizabeth Menlo Park, Ca. B.S.E., Princeton, 1980 Liberman, Laura Newton, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Lombardo, Gregory Thomas New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1968; M.A., Columbia, 1980

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 157

Love, Karen Anita Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1980

Luyando, Yvonne New York, N.Y. B.A., Fordham, 1980

Ma, Averil I. Thornwood, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

McDonagh, Kevin T. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Magnes, Jeffrey New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1975

Mahon, John Henry Huntington, N.Y. B.S., Notre Dame, 1980

Markowitz, Arlene Helen Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Wellesley, 1980

Mathews, Donald Marshall Schenectady, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Miller, Steven Zane Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Milrod, Barbara Louise New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1979

Modic, Frank Edward Scotia, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1980

Moss, William John Demarest, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1980

Mulvey, Kevin Patrick Los Altos, Ca. B.S., San Francisco, 1980

Neustein, Steven Mark West Orange, N.J. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1980 Nimkin, Katherine New York, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1978 Nordli, Douglas Ray Melville, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1980 Odrich, Marc Geoffrey Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 O'Keeffe, Richard Michael, Jr. Weston, Ma. B.A., Dartmouth, 1980 Olsen, Janet Louise Queens Village, N.Y. B.A., Vassar, 1978; M.S., Columbia, 1979 Olson, Eric Jon Chadds Ford, Pa. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Oquendo, Maria Antonia Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., B.A., Tufts, 1980 Palma, James New York, N.Y. City College, 1980 Palmer, Barbara Ann New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979 Pawlowski, Ann Margaret Lynnfield, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Pearl, Michael Lawrence Southfield, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1979 Peng, Benjamin C. H. Kew Gardens, N.Y. B.A., Rochester, 1980 Pero, Robert Thomas Hyde Park, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Proano, Maritza Queens, N.Y. B.A., Smith, 1980 Quinn, Brian James Massapequa, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1979 Rabbani, LeRoy E. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Rautenberg, Mark Alan Brockton, Ma. B.A., Cornell, 1980 Raymond, Elizabeth Gray Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Swarthmore, 1980 ReiUy, Philip Joseph New York, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1 976 Reimold, Andreas Michael N. Canton, Oh. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Rennert, Douglas Andrew New York, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1980 Roberts, James Wayne Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Rodrigues, Beatriz A. Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Romano, Thomas Jerome Camillus, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Buffalo), 1980 Rottkamp, John Robert Commack, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980 Ruiz, Frank Westbury, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1980 Saladini, Vincent Rocco, Jr. Clifton, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Santos, Annabelle Villatuya Hollis, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980 Schmiedeberg, Phyllis N. Babylon, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1980 Schoen, Robert Edward Beverly Hills, Ca. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Schoenberg, Norman Island Park, N.Y. B.A., Hofstra, 1980 Schriger, David Lawrence Englewood, N.J. B.A., Amherst, 1980 Schwartzbach, Gary C. Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Scuderi, Donna Marie Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1980 Seymour, Neal Edward Oakdale, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Shaw, Andrey Shin-Yee Seattle, Wash. B.A., Columbia, 1979 Sheffield, Mary Katherine Longmeadow, Ma. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1980 Singer, Meriamne Bruche New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1980 Somlo, Stefan Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Sorensen, Mark Francis Rockville Centre, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1980

158 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1984 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985

Speirs, Robert Thomas Port Washington, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Spriegel, John R. Evanston, II. B.S.E., Princeton, 1978 Stegall, Mark Dale Crosbyton, Tx. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Stork, Philip Jacques Stewart Englewood, N.J. B.S., Harvard, 1977 Tamargo, Rafael Jesus Santurce, P.R. B.A., Princeton, 1980 Teichman, Faye Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Brooklyn, 1980 Tilley, Robert John Tacoma, Wa. B.S., Washington, 1980 Tong, Dominic J. F. Honolulu, Hi. B.S., Hawaii (Manoa), 1978 Torres, Ramon Antonio New York, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1980 Turey, Maureen New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1976 Weber, Pamela Ann Buffalo, N.Y. B.S., McGill, 1980 Westermann, Robert Bayless West Hartford, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1980 Westrich, David Joshua New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980 Whitehurst, James Howell Atlanta, Ga. B.S., Vanderbilt, 1980

Whitley, Markus Andrew Bowie, Md. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1980 Whitlock, Mary Elizabeth Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1980 Wiedermann, Joseph Gad Englewood, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1979 Winston, Julia Lynn Oakland, N.J. B.S., Bucknell, 1979 Wirth, Robert Lockridge Troy, Mi. B.S.E., Michigan, 1974; M.S.E., 1975 Witham, Rebecca Sue Needham, Ma. B.S., Yale, 1979 Wong, Shing-Chiu East Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Wong, Ting Hung Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1980 Yancopoulos, George Damis Elmhurst, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980 Yen, Catherine Eleanor Honolulu, Hi. B.S., Hawaii (Manoa), 1979 Yuen, Jeffrey C. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977; M.S., California Institute of Technol- ogy 1978

Student Roster: Class of 1985

Abis, David Woodboume, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1981

Aboody, Linda Rachel Westbury, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981

Alexander, Joseph James Stockton, Ca. B.S., California (Davis), 1981

Aviv, Jonathan Enoch Beverly Hills, Ca. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Avner, Jeffrey Ronald Bellerose Manor, N.Y. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1981

Bachner, Evan Jay Syossett, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Bank, David Eugene Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Baruch, Alice M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Mount Holyoke, 1974; M.S., New York Medical,

1979; Ph.D., 1981 Barzel, Eyal Bronx, N.Y. B.Sc, Brown, 1981 Bass, Anne Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Batik, Odette G. New York, N.Y. B.S., Antioch, 1977; M.P.H, Columbia, 1981 Baum, Seth Joshua New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Benardo, Larry Steven Anaheim Hills, Ca. B.S., California (Irvine), 1977; Ph.D., Stanford,

1981 Bendixen, Birgitte Holt Irvington, N.Y. B.A., California (San Diego), 1973; M.A., 1975;

C.Phil., 1977; Ph.D., 1980 Bindelglass, David Fred White Plains, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Bogosh, Samuel Winston Brookline, Ma. B.Sc, Harvard, 1981 Bolo, Peter Michael Grand Blanc, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1981 Brancati, Frederick Louis Dix Hills, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Branden, Peter John Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Johns Hopkins, 1981 Brennan, John Paul New York, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1975 Brown, Robin Renee Suitland, Md. B.S., Maryland, 1981 Brown, William C. Sparkill, N.Y. B.S, SUNY (Binghamton), 1981 Brusco, Louis Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985 159

Canning, Robert Babylon, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Chan, Bernadctte New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980

Chance, John Tighe Rutherford, N.J. B.A., Williams, 1981

Chang, Sophia Whasun McLean, Va. B.A., Amherst, 1981

Charney, Mark Alan Fullerton, Ca. B.S., Stanford, 1981

Coburn, Cynthia Ann New York, N.Y. B.Sc, Brown, 1980

Cohen, Seth Aloe Cambridge, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Coman, Eugene Anthony Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1981

Compaine, Andrew Guy Cherry Hill, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Conde, Miguel Angel New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Crim, Julia Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Oberlin, 1978

Cushman, James Gordon Camp Hill, Pa. B.A., Washington, 1981

Dalak, Gregory Wakeem Staten Island, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1981

Davol, Joan Evers Greenwich, Ct. B.A., Williams, 1976

Deutsch, Nicholas Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Diamond, Lisa Carol New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Dickson, David Gordon Lewiston, N.Y. B.S., Rochester, 1981

Dirbas, Frederick Mark Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., Stanford, 1981

Downey, Robert John Closter, N.J. B.Sc, Yale, 1981

Duberman, Eric David Armonk, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Edeen, John Kearny, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Ehrlich, Martin Harvey New York, N.Y. B.A., Rochester, 1973

Emery, John Matthew Cedarhurst, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1979

Fallon, Brian Anthony Bellerose, N.Y. B.A., Harvard 1976; M.Ed, 1978; M.P.H, Columbia, 1980

Flock, Timothy Joseph Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Freeman, Neil Joshua Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Williams, 1979

Frend, Jeremy M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Frishman, Gary Nathan Armonk, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1980

Gabrieli, Christopher F.O. Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Geller, Arthur Jay East Brunswick, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Gerst, Steven Richard New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Geurts, Barbara Linda So. Plainfield, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1981

Gilson, Michael Kenneth Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Glassman, Steven David Teaneck, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Gopal, Aasha S. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979; M.Sc, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981

Gordon, Marc Lawrence Rochester, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Buffalo), 1975; M.A., 1976

Greenberg, Steven Mark Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Gribetz, Richard I. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1975; B.H.L., M.A., Jewish Theologi- cal Seminary, 1979

Grinberg, Manuel Eduardo Roslyn, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981

Harding, James Sutherland Toledo, Oh. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Hardy, Russell Irving Auburn, Ma. B.A., Williams, 1978

Hershey, Mark David Brewster, N.Y. B.A., Rochester, 1981

Hill, Terri Lynn Columbia, Md. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Hirschhorn, Lisa Ruth New York, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Hodges, Marian Osborne Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1979

Hoffman, Jeffrey Greg Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Hong, Roy W. Staten Island, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981

Houscy, Gerard Mitchell Harper Woods, Mi. B.S., Michigan, 1981

Hripcsak, George Michael Hicksville, N.Y. B.S., Haverford, 1981

Jacobs, Laurie Gail Pleasantville, N.Y. B.A., Wesleyan, 1981

Jennis, Andrew Abraham South Orange, N.J. B.A., Yale, 1981

Jones, James Irvin New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981

160 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985

Jones, Valerie Teresa Montclair, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1981

Julien, Juana Maria Hileah, Fl. B.S., Miami, 1981

Kaplan, Andrew Howard Melville, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Kaplan, Bruce Plainview, N.Y. B.S., Adelphi, 1981

Kim, Albert Nelson Spring VaUey, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Klumpar, David Ivan Lexington, Ma. B.Sc, Brown, 1981

Koeleveld, Robin Frederick Newport News, Va. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Kramer, Ethan Douglas Tuscaloosa, Al. B.A., Vassar, 1981

Laske, Douglas Walter New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Levine, Nancy E. Setauket, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1980

Lin, Christopher Chi-Ching Forest Hills, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981

Lloyd, Mary Ann Ellen Danville, Ca. B.S., San Francisco, 1981

Lodge, Henry Sears Beverly, Ma. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Maddon, Paul Jay Bayside, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Madsen, Nancy Sue Wethersfield, Ct. B.S., Bates, 1981

Markowitz, David Daniel Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Swarthmore, 1981

Matthew, Thomas Lewis New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

McKenzie, Keith B. Jamaica, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

McNuJty, John Michael West Nyack, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1981

Mendez, Leonardo Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., Yale, 1981

Meng, Tze-Chiang New Rochelle, N.Y. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Morrone, Lee Ellen Lackawaxen, Pa. B.A., Barnard, 1981

Moscoso, Juan Francisco Guaynabo, P.R. B.S., Michigan, 1981

Navedo, Andres Tadeo Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Puerto Rico, 1981

Nunez, Richard Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Oddone, Eugene Z. Colorado Springs, Co. B.S., Denver, 1981

Ores, David Joseph Leonia, N.J. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, 1981

Pacheco, Elba Milagros Ponce, P.R. B.A., Wellesley, 1981

Pak, Wonkyu Sunnyvale, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Pearsen, Kenneth Daniel Rochester, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Pollock, Roger Gerard Farmingdale, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1981

Radoslovich, Glauco Andrew Cliffside Park, N.J. B.S., St Peter's, 1981

Reiser, Janet Ruth New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Rosen, Beth Alyse Massapequa, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Rosenblum, Nancy Jamaica Estates, N.Y. B.Sc, Cornell, 1981

Ross, Lisa Anne Los Angeles, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Russo, Joseph Richard Huntington, N.Y. B.S., St John 's (New York), 1981

Sampson, John George Bronx, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1981

Satra, Karin Helene W. Paterson, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1981

Schweitzer, Jana Tenafly, N.J. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1981

Seefeld, William C.R. Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1973; O.D., New England College of

Optometry, 1977 Segal, Bruce Arthur Weston, Ma. B.A., Clark, 1981 Shapiro, Janet Marjorie New York, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1981 Sheiman, Robert Glenn Yonkers, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1980 Shikora, Scott Alan Bellerose, N.Y. B.S., Muhlenberg 1981 Shlasko, Edward New York, N.Y. B.A., Oberlin, 1979 Siderides, Elizabeth Stamford, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Silbey, Mark Bennett Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Wesleyan, 1979; M.A., Rice, 1981 Simotas, Alexander C. Alpine, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1981 Slater, Jonathan Allen New City, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Spector, Paul Joseph New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1978 Stein, Michael David Cliffside Park, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Stopek, Alison Tami Plainview, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981 Straceski, Anthony Joseph E. Hartford, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Strachan, Alexander New York, N.Y. B.A., Fordham, 1980

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1985 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1986 161

Summit, Pamela Honey Merrick, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981

Taterka, James Andrew New York, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1981

Thadani, Vjay Michael Chevy Chase, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1976; M.Phil. , Yale, 1978;

Ph.D., Yale, 1981 Theise, Neil David W. Hartford, Ct. B.A., B.A.S., Pennsylvania, 1981 Tissot, Marc Francis Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Queens (New York), 1981 Touran, Touraj Tehran, Iran B.A., Princeton, 1981 Trehu, Stephen Marc Wilmington, De. B.A., Princeton, 1981 Valdes, Alfonso Jose Miami, Fl. B.S., Miami, 1981

Villegas, Robert Arturo New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.S., St. John's (New York), 1981 Walker, Benjamin Harrison New York, N.Y. B.A., Bowdoin, 1981 Warren, Wayne Scott Forest Hills, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

1981 Weinthal, Joel Adam Pearl River, N.Y. B.S., Stanford, 1981 Weiss, Robert Marc N. Bellmore, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1981 Willenbucher, Robert Francis New York, N.Y. B.S., Rochester, 1981 Wiltz, Othon San Juan, P.R. B.S., Johns Hopkins, 1981 Wohl, Jodie Carol New York, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1977 Wolf, David Cary Livingston, N.J. B.A., Yale, 1981 Yarmush, Joel Mann Brooklyn, N.Y. B.E., Cooper Union, 1977; M.A., Princeton, 1979;

Ph.D., Princeton, 1981 Zeller, Lawrence Ira New York, N.Y. M.S. W., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1974 Zuckerman, Alan Miles N. Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Student Roster: Class of 1986

Albanese, Salvatore San Juan, P.R. B.S., Brandeis, 1982

Allen, Kevin P. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Altmann, Dory B. West Orange, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Angel, Jose Manuel Sunnyside, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1982

Ashbaugh, Cameron D. Boise, Id. B.A., Dartmouth, 1982

Attia, Evelyn Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1982

Auerbach, Steven B. New York, N.Y. B.S., Union (Schnectady), 1982

Aupperle, Peter M. Melville, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1982

Balmaceda, Casilda M. Ponce, P.R. B.S., Tufts, 1981

Bass, Lawrence S. Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1982

Bedichek, Ellen G. Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Middlebury, 1977

Benton, Anne F. La Jolla, Ca. B.S., Harvard, 1981

Boublik, Martin Caldwell, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1982

Boulier, James P. Glen Burnie, Md. B.E.S., Johns Hopkins, 1982

Brager, Amy R. Mt. Vernon, N.Y. B.S., Tufts, 1977

Bramble, Daniel M. Trinidad, W.l. B.A., Boston, 1982

Brevig, Kjetil Orangeburg, N.Y. B.S., Tufts, 1982

Brody, Mark R. Somerville, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1979

Bromson, Mark S. Tarrytown, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Brown, Carol Leslie Los Angeles, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Brown, Steven L. Decatur, Ga. B.S., Emory, 1981

Buetow, Peter C. West Islip, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1982

Burke, Steven K. Chestnut Hill, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Cannon, Chris P. Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Yale, 1982

Carroll, Deborah J. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard 1982

Carter, Fred M. Garden City, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1982

Castillo, Jairo E. Astoria, N.Y. B.A., Queens (New York), 1982

Castro, Michael P. Baltimore, Md. B.A., Brandeis, 1979

Chan, Angela Mei New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1982

162 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1986

Chan, Edward D. Colorado Springs, Co. B.A., B.S., Colorado, 1982

Chavez, Camille D. Briarwood, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1977

Chen, Ming Hui Princeton, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1982

Chester, Janis Gale New York, N.Y. B.A., Hunter, 1981

Chow, Franklin T. Northport, N.Y. B.S., Rochester, 1982

Civantos, Francisco Coral Gables, Fl. B.A., B.S., Harvard, 1982

Clark, Richard D. Denver, Co. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1969; Ph.D., 1975

Coelho, Daniel D. Prospect, Ct. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Coffey, Tom K. Portland, Or. B.A., Stanford, 1982

Cole, Douglas G. Casper, Wy. B.A., Dartmouth, 1981

Cooke, Lawrence W. Palatka, Fl. B.S., Florida, 1982

Dal Pan, Gerald J. Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1982

Damm, Christopher Mineola, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Davila, Jose Jorge Rio Piedras, P.R. B.A., Princeton, 1982

DeAUeaume, Lauren Albany, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1981

DeMayo, William M. Ridgewood, N.J. B.S., Boston, 1982

Dent, John M. McLean, Va. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Diaz, Theresa Orangeburg, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1982

Dominguez, Lourdes New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1982

Donovan, Nancy Jean New York, N.Y. B.A., Bowdoin, 1978

Duncan, Susana G. New York, N.Y. B.A., Cambridge, 1969

Edwards, Niloo M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1969

Ehlert, Frederick Sheboygan, Wi. B.S., Marquette, 1982

Ehrich, Elliot W. Marblehead, Ma. B.A., Princeton, 1981

Estabrook, Scott G. Far Hills, N.J. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1982

Finkelstein, Michael Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Fisher, Keith D. Oklahoma City, Ok. B.S., Oklahoma, 1982

Fradin, Mark S. Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981

Frieden, Thomas R. Larchmont, N.Y. B.A., Oberlin, 1982

Friedman, Noah J. Flushing, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Binghampton), 1982

Friedmann, Craig H. New York, N.Y. B.A., Brandeis, 1975

Garrity, Michael J. Hingham, Ma. B.A., Massachusetts (Amherst), 1981

Gelernt, Mark D. Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1982

Gilson, Michael F. Cambridge, Ma. B.S.E., Princeton, 1978

Gomes, John L. Waltham, Ma. B.Sc, Brown, 1982

Gonzalez, Charles J. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1980

Gordon, Paul Clark Woodbridge, Ct. B.A., Yale, 1982

Greenblatt, Eric P. New York, N.Y. B.S., Michigan, 1982

Gruen, John P. New York, N.Y. B.A., Yale, 1976

Hardy, Stephen P. New York, N.Y. B.A., Colgate, 1979

Hartman, Sarah Washington, D.C. B.S., Tufts, 1977

Housepian, David M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Hyman, Barry Scott New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1977

Jadonath, Ram Lakhan Queens, N.Y. B.A., Queens (New York), 1982

Jay, Cheryl Ann Torrance, Ca. B.S., California (Los Angeles), 1982

Jicha, Douglas L. Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Johannet, Christopher New York, N.Y. B.A., Sarah Lawrence, 1977

John, Joseph A. Bronx, N.Y. B.Sc., City College, 1982

Jonassen, Amy E. Locust Valley, N.Y. B.A., Rice, 1981

Jones, Sean Eric Seattle, Wa. B.A., Reed, 1980

Joseph, Antonio, Jr. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1982

Korner, Judy New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1979

Kraus, Warren M. Valley Stream, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1982

Kuester, David J. Woodside, N.Y. B.A., Wisconsin, 1974

Kugelmass, Aaron D. Stoors, Ct. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Lanier, Diane L. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cambridge, 1979

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1986 163

Leavitt, Robert P. Longmeadow, Ma. B.S., Trinity (Connecticut), 1982

Lennon, Paul F. Saddle River, N.J. B.S., Harvard, 1982

Lemer, Barron H. University Heights, Oh. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Lewin, Julie M. Princeton, N.J. B.S.E., Princeton, 1982

Linden, Todd B. North CaldweU, N.J. B.A., B.Sc, Brown, 1982

Linskey, Mark E. Somerville, N.J. B.A., Dartmouth, 1982

Lopez, Juan A. Plantation, Fl. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1982

Lundblad, James R. Yakima, Wa. B.S., Stanford, 1981

Lunt, John G. Saratoga, Wy. B.A., Colorado, 1980

Maday, Michael G. Mt. Prospect, II. B.A., Knox, 1981; M.A., Columbia, 1982

Malkani, Arthur L. New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1982

Mandel, Susan J. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Marco, AianP. Oakhurst, N.J. B. A., Johns Hopkins, 1982

McCormack, Bruce M. Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Brown, 1982

Miller, Thomas E. Richmond, In. Princeton, 1981

Mitrane, Donald P. North Bergen, N.J. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Mitrani, Raul Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Morales, Susan Pelham, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Muscat, Paul L. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Naidu, Rahul K. Skokie, II. B.Sc., Stanford, 1982

Nazarian, Levon N. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Nields, Jenifer A. Huntington, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1977

Owen, Heidi M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Rhode Island, 1976; B.S., 1978

Park, Edward K. Holbrook, N.Y. B.A., Harvard 1981

Parsons-Armstrong, Susan Sharon Springs, N.Y. B.A., KirkJand, 1976

Pearl, Barbara S. New York, N.Y. B.A., Emory, 1974

Perese, Deniz A. Buffalo, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Pernis, Alessandra B. Bronxville, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1981

Picou, Dian A. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., City College, 1982

Polsen, Dianne C. New York, N.Y. B.S., Mercy, 1978

Rapuano, Christopher Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Brown, 1982

Re, Louis S. Yonkers, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Rich, Harlan G. Rego Park, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Roland, Aaron M. Livermore, Ca. B.A., Yale, 1979

Roth, Jeffrey S. New Haven, Ct. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Rubin, Marc S. Chestnut Hill, Ma. B.A., Williams, 1982

Rudolf, Margaret S. New York, N.Y. B.S., Brown, 1981

Sable, David B. West Orange, N.J. B.S., Pennsylvania, 1981

Saffran, Alan J. Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1981

Santoro, Ian H. Dover, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Schwann, Thomas A. South Massapequa, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Seidner, Elyse L. Philadelphia, Pa. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Siller, Karen A. Pleasantville, N.Y. B.A., Pace, 1972

Slawin, Kevin M. Valley Stream, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982

Slusser, Wendelin M. New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1981

Smith, David A. White Plains, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1965

Solnick, Jay V. Kansas City, Ks. B.A., California (San Diego), 1971; Ph.D., North Carolina.

1977 Stauffer, J. Turner Hamilton, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1982 Strauch, Robert J. New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1982 Tamman, Richard Short Hills, N.J. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1982 Teltscher, Janet C. Roslyn, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981 Thomas, William G. Clinton, Md. B.S., George Washington, 1982 Tronolone, William Raritan, N.J. B.A., Lafayette, 1982 Turtel, Lawrence S. Melville, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982 Warren, Stephen P. Newark, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1982

164 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1986 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1987

Watnick, Terry South Orange, N.J. B.S., Brown, 1981

Weil, Henry Cooperstown, N.Y. B.A., Hamilton, 1980

Weinstein, Toba A. Garden City, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Binghamton), 1982

Weinstock, Ira A. Boulder, Co. B.A., Williams, 1980

White, Richard L., Jr. Ithaca, N.Y. B.A., Cornel}, 1982

Wint, Jeffrey C. New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1982

Yonkers, Kimberly A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1979

Student Roster: Class of 1987

Adams, William G. Hamilton, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Adler, Sidney J. Bellmore, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1983

Ahn, Jeffrey Min Claremont, Ca. B.A., Pomona, 1983

Anderson, William Suffern, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Andreasson, Katrin I. San Francisco, Ca. M.S., Stanford, 1983

Atlas, Steven J. Bethesda, Md. B.S., Tufts, 1982

Bacon, Charles K. Westwood, Ma. B.S., Harvard, 1983

Bell, Myron Aiken, S.C. B.A., Yale, 1983

Benjamin, Ivor Great Neck, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1983

Bethel, Colin A. Nassau, Bahamas B.A., Harvard, 1983

Bichell, David Baltimore, Md. B.A., Johns Hopkins, 1980

Binderow, Sander R. Douglaston, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1983

Bingham, Peter M. Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Bowe, Barbara Ridgewood, N.J. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1983

Brzustowics, Linda New Hyde Park, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Burd, Randall East Longmeadow, Ma. B.A., Dartmouth, 1983

Butler, Marilyn W. Harris, Tx. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Buyske, Jo Los Angeles, Ca. B.A., Cornell, 1981

Carrancejie, Margo New York, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1983

Carter, Judy A. New York, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Albany), 1977

Cataquet, David New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Chang, Mark W. Kalamazoo, Mi. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Chen, Yu Liang Cayce, S.C. B.S., South Carolina, 1983

Chess, Mitchell A. Monsey, N.Y. B.S., Union, 1983

Chien, Ann M. Englewood, N.J. B.S., Yale, 1983

Colon, Francisco G. Rio Pedras, P.R. B.S., Washington, 1983

Constantindes, Minas Narrangasett, R.I. B.A., Brown, 1983

Cosman, Bard C. Hillsdale, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Curran, Peter G. New York, N.Y. B.A., Middlebury, 1980

D'Amico, Thomas Wilmington, De. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Davison, Henry Jr. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Dawson, Scott C. New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

DellAngelo, Robert Pound Ridge, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Densel, Donna L. Wayne, N.J. B.S., Duke, 1983

Dickstein, Marc L. Roslyn Heights, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1983

Diefenbach, Pamela New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1981

Dominguez, Kenneth Whittier, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Dorman, Michael A. Livingston, N.J. B.A., Lafayette, 1983

Edelstein, Patti M. Scotch Plains, N.J. B.S., Georgetown, 1983

Erdmann, Anthony C. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1968

Fairbanks, Mary E. Troy, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1983

Figueredo, Vincent M. Tampa, Fl. B.S., Haverford, 1983

Fine, Robert B. Setauket, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Flood, Mary Theresa New York, N.Y. Ph.D., New York University, 1976

Forese, Laura Lee Franklin Lakes, N.J. B.S.E., Princeton, 1983

STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1987 165

Fuller, Jonathan E. New York, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1979

Gazetas, Polyxene New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1983

Goldstoff, Michael Ithaca, N.Y. B.S., Cornell, 1983

GraH, Steven Neal Trenton, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Green, Andrew Great Neck, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1983

Grimm, Cordelia New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1981

Guidera, Steven A. Englishtown, N.J. B.A., Franklin and Marshall, 1983

Hahn, Chiwon Storrs, Ct. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1983

Hedberg, Viking A. Westhampton Beach, N.Y. B.S., Yale, 1983

Ho, Kevin Cleveland Heights, Oh. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Hoe, Robin Kim Flushing, N.Y. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1983

Hohl, William M. Santa Monica, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1980

Horwitz, Mara Jean Brightwaters, N.Y. B.A., Northwestern, 1983

Hudak, Craig M. West Hartford, Ct. B.A., Princeton, 1983

Jacobson, Mercedes New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1982

Jaile-Jesus, C. New York, N.Y. B.A., Manhattanville, 1983

Jeffers, Jasmine G. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.S., SUNY (Stony Brook), 1983

Joseph, Kimberly T. Silver Spring, Md. B.A., Maryland, 1983

Kaplan, Andrew S. Memphis, Tn. B.A., Yale, 1983

Kazim, Robert Bronx, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Kelly, Katherine J. Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Swarthmore, 1981

Kim, Hyung Leona Spring Valley, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1983

Kim, Steve Ho-Suk Maumee, Oh. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1983

Klein, Jeffrey D. Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Krauss, William E. Northbrook, II. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Kurth, Rebecca Jane Methuen, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Landschultz, William Dubuque, la. B.A., M.S., Chicago, 1982

Lane, Mariellen Ardsley, N.Y. B.S., Fordham, 1983

Laufer, Terri M. Rockville, Md. B.A., Princeton, 1983

Lawrence, Peter Bronx, N.Y. B.S., Long Island, 1983

Lee, Thomas H. Worthington, Oh. B. A., Amherst, 1983

Levinc, Daniel Elmont, N.Y. B.A., Brown, 1981

Lewtas, Joanne L. Toronto, Can. B.A., Bowdoin, 1983

Li, Deborah C. Rumson, N.J. B.S., Bryn Mawr, 1983

Loiselle, John M. Sharon, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Lovett, James E. Summit, N.J. B.S., Bates, 1983

Luban, Jeremy New York, N.Y. B.A., SUNY (Purchase), 1982

Lutzker, Stuart G. Tappan, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Lynch, Julia A. San Francisco, Ca. B.S., California (Davis), 1983

MacArthur, Solange New York, N.Y. B.A., Hunter, 1983

Mann, Michael A. Flushing, N.Y. B.A., Yeshiva, 1983

Markowitz, Marian P. Scarsdale, N.Y. B.A., Wellesley, 1983

Maxcy, Jeffrey L. Marion, In. B.S., Purdue, 1983

Mayer, Pierre V. Medford, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Mayor, Manuel R. Miami, Fl. B.A., Brandeis, 1983

McDonagh, Thomas Bellrose, N.Y. B.A., Haverford, 1983

McGuire, Dawn New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1976

Mendez, Beatriz Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1983

Michaels, Basil M. Bridgeport, Ct. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Munier, Michael A. San Francisco, Ca. B.A., California (Berkeley), 1983

Muntzer, Ann M. Bellrose, N.Y. B.A., Amherst, 1983

Myers, liana D.R. Weston, Ma. B.A., Cambridge, 1980

Nakamura, Glenn E. Sepulveda, Ca. B.S., California Institute of Technology, 1983

Nicolaides, Maria N. New York, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1980

Novins, Douglas K. Ardsley, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Palmer, William S. New York, N.Y. B.S., Columbia, 1982

166 STUDENT ROSTER: CLASS OF 1987

Parada, Nereida A. Hato Rey, P.R. B.A., Princeton, 1983

Peterson, Karen L. Stratford, Ct. B.A., Brown, 1983

Phillips, Louise A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Kean, 1973

Porras, Cornelio J. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., New York University, 1983

Pruitt, Scott San Antonio, Tx. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Rayhill, Stephen New Hartford, N.Y. B.S., Middlebury, 1978

Rinko, Carol Jean New York, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1983

Roach, Neil A. Englewood, N.J. B.A., Rutgers, 1983

Rodriguez-Ema, Martin Marietta, Ga. B.S., Yale, 1983

Rodts, Gerald E. Princeton, N.J. B.A., Princeton, 1983

Roelke, Marc Greenwich, Ct. B.S., Brown, 1983

Rosenberg, Michael Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Rubin, John A. Brookline, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Ryan, Michael H. New Haven, Ct. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Ryu, Janice K. Northridge, Ca. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Sanda, Martin G. New Haven, Ct. B.A., Yale, 1983

Saltman, Adam E. Woodcliff Lake, N.J. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Saxon, James Jackson Heights, N.Y. B.F.A., New York University, 1977

Schainholz, Daniel Teaneck, N.J. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Schierman, Steven W. Brooklyn, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1983

Schwartzberg, Pamela Amherst, Ma. B.A., Princeton, 1981

Selznick, Hugh S. New Rochelle, N.Y. B.A., Cornell, 1983

Shannon, Kevin M. Tampa, Fl. B.S., Haverford, 1983

Shapiro, Robert E. Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1978

Shibutani, Yasushi Chappaqua, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1983

Shumway, Joseph B. Cheyenne, Wy. B.S., Brigham Young, 1983

Snook, Curtis P. New York, N.Y. B.A., Harvard, 1982

Soler, Maria E. Astoria, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1983

St. Clair, Steven H. Sarasota, Fl. B.A., Dartmouth, 1983

Stevens, Peter D. Wayne, Pa. B.A., Columbia, 1983

Stone, Joanne L. Roslyn Heights, N.Y. B.A., Franklin and Marshall, 1983

Stormberg, David Sidney, Ne. B.A., Concepcion Seminary, 1978

Suarez, Sylvia M. Tenafly, N.J. B.A., Smith, 1983

Sweeney, Sheila A. New York, N.Y. B.A., Dartmouth, 1983

Taylor, Thomas S. Marblehead, Ma. B.A., Dartmouth, 1981

Thai, Gary D. Port Washington, N.Y. B.A., Pennsylvania, 1983

Thomhill, Marsha Spring Valley, N.Y. B.A., Barnard, 1983

Torres, Jose A. Santa Paula, P.R. B.S., Brandeis, 1983

Walton, Stacie L. Denver, Co. B.A., Stanford, 1980

Weber, Jonathon T. New York, N.Y. B.A., Princeton, 1980

Weine, Steven M. Farmington Hills, Mi. B.A., Michigan, 1982

Welch, Robert J. Quincy, Ma. B.A., Harvard, 1983

Whang, Ihn Seong Amherst, N.Y. B.A., Duke, 1983

Willis, James R. Eau Claire, Wis. B.S, Wisconsin, 1983

Wong, Lawrence Ellicot City, Md. B.S., Johns Hopkins, 1983

Yin, Way Silver Spring, Md. B.S, Maryland, 1982

Young, Gregory J. Parsippany, N.J. B. A., Holy Cross, 1983

Ziamik, William Westfield, N.J. B.S, Duke, 1983

Index

Absence, leave of, 43-44

Academic disciple: see Regulations

Academic year: calendar, 5-7; divisions, 44

Administration: Health Sciences, 8; Joint Administrative Board, 10; staff, 11

Admission(s); Committee on, 10, 25-26; application procedure, 25; requirements, 25-26; application fee, 25, 28; to advanced standing, 26; of foreign stu- dents, 26

Administrative staff, 8

Advanced standing, 26

Advisory Committee to the Dean, Chair- men's, 10

Affiliated hospitals, 21-24

Alpha Omega Alpha, 41

Alumni Association, 41

Anatomy: courses, 45

Anatomy and Cell Biology, officers of instruction, 57-58

Anesthesiology: course, 46; officers of instruction, 58-62

Application: for degrees, 5-7, 29; for admission, 25-26; fees, 25, 28; for finan- cial aid, 31-40

Attendance, 27

Auditing courses, 27

Augustus C. Long Library, 19

Awards, 38-40, 51-52

Bard Hall, 30-31

Bard Haven Towers, 31

Bassett, Mary Imogene, Hospital, 22

Biochemistry: course, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 62-63

Biology: abnormal human, course, 44

Biophysics and biophyscial chemistry, spe- cial program in, 51

Biostatistics, officers of instruction, 123-24

Calendar, Academic, 5-7

Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, 20

Center for Psychoanalytic Training and

Research, 50 Centers for Community Health, 20 Certificate in psychoanalysis, 50 Chairmen's Advisory Committee to the

Dean, 10 Clinical genetics, special program in, 51

College of Physicians and Surgeons: histo- ry, purpose, and location, 17, 18-19; program of instruction, 43-52

Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, 17-21

Columbia University: relation to P&S, histo- ry, 17, 18-19; library, 19; campus facili- ties, 40

Comprehensive Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research, 19

Conduct, 27

Course numbers, key to, 44

Courses: electives, 43; summary of curricu- lum, 44; basic science and introductory clinical, 44-46; major clinical year, 46- 48; Fourth year, 48; for practicing physi- cians and specialists, 55

Curriculum: Committee on, 10; summary of, 44

Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, 8 Degrees: application dates, 5-7, 29; dates of award, 6-7; M.D., 17, 49; Ph.D., 49, 50, 51; M.S., 50; Med.Sc.D., 55; see also Certificate in psychoanalysis; National Board examinations Dental and Oral Surgery, School of, 18, 20 Departments of Instruction, 57-147 Dermatology: course, 46; officers of instruc- tion, 63-65 Discipline, academic: see Regulations Doctor of Medical Science degree, 55 Doctor of Medicine degree, 17; in combina- tion with M.P.H. degree, 49; in combina- tion with Ph.D. degree, 49 Doctor of Philosophy degree; in combina- tion with M.D. degree, 49; in nutrition, 50; in biophysics and biophysical chemis- try, 51 Dormitories, 30-31

Emeriti officers, 11-14

Employment for spouses of students, 31

Endowed lectureships, 51

Endowed scholarship funds, 32-36

Environmental Health Sciences, officers of instruction, 124-25

Epidemiology, officers of instruction, 125- 26

Equipment: estimated cost of, 30; require- ment, 30

168 INDEX

Executive Committee of the Faculty Coun- cil, 8 Expenses, estimated, 30; see also Fees

Faculty Council: Executive Committee of the, 8; of the Faculty of Medicine, 9

Faculty of Medicine, 8-14

Fees: payment of, 5-7; application, 25, 28; health service and hospital insurance, 28; late, 28; withdrawal and adjustment of, 29; see also Expenses, estimated

Financial aid, 31-40

Foreign students: admission of, 26; loans to, 36

Genetics: see Human Genetics and Devel- opment

Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center, 20

Gift funds, 36

Grades and promotions, 43-44

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences: rela- tion to P&S, 49

Gynecology: see Obstetrics and Gynecol- ogy

Harlem Hospital Center, 22

Health administration: officers of instruc- tion, 126-29

Health service, 28

Helen Hayes Hospital, 22-23

History of the College and the University, 18-19

Hospitals, teaching, 21-24

Housing, 30-31

Human Genetics and Development: course, 45; officers of instruction, 65-66

Human Nutrition, Institute of, 20

Institute of Cancer Research, 19 Institute of Human Nutrition, 20 International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction, 21

Joint Administrative Board, 10

Julius and Armand Hammer Health Sciences Center Augustus Long Li- brary, 19

Key to course numbers, 44

Leaves of absence, 43-44 Lectureships, endowed, 51 Libraries: Health Sciences, 19; University,

19,40 Loans, 36-38

Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, 22

Master of Science degree: in human nutri- tion, 50; in physical therapy and occupa- tional therapy, 50

Medical service to students, 28

Medicine: courses, 45, 46, 47; officers of instruction, 66-78

Microbiology: course, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 78-80

Microscopes, 30

Morristown Memorial Hospital, 23

National Board examinations, 7, 44

Neurological Surgery, officers of instruc- tion, 80-81

Neurology: teaching hospital, 22; courses, 47; officers of instruction, 81-84

Nondiscriminatory policies, statement of, 17-18

Nursing, School of, 18

Nutrition: course, 45; special programs in, 50; see also Institute of Human Nutrition

Obstetrics and Gynecology: teaching hospi- tal, 22; course, 47; officers of instruction, 84-88

Occupational therapy, see Physical Thera- py; Master of Science degree

Ophthalmology: teaching hospital, 22; course, 47; officers of instruction, 88-91

Orthopedic Surgery: teaching hospital, 21; course, 47; officers of instruction, 91-94

Otolaryngology: course, 47; officers of instruction, 94-95

Overlook Hospital, 23

P&S Club, 40

Pathology: courses, 45; officers of instruc- tion, 95-101

Pediatrics: teaching hospital, 22; course, 48; officers of instruction, 102-109

Pharmacology: course, 46, officers of instruction, 109-11

Physical therapy and occupational therapy, special programs in, 50; see also Rehabil- itation Medicine

Physicians and Surgeons: see College of Physicians and Surgeons

Physiology: courses, 46; officers of instruc- tion, 111-12

Population and Family Health, officers of instruction, 129-30

Postgraduate Programs, 55

Presbyterian Hospital, 10, 21-22

President of the University, 8

Prizes, 38-40, 51-52

INDEX 169

Program of instruction for the M.D. degree, 43; summary of curriculum, 44

Programs, postgraduate, 55

Programs, special: for the Ph.D. degree, 49, 50, 51; in physical therapy and occupational therapy, 50; in psychoana- lytic medicine, 50; in nutrition, 50; in clinical genetics, 51; in biophysics and biophysical chemistry, 51

Promotions, grades and, 43-44

Psychiatric Institute, New York State, 18, 24

Psychiatry: teaching hospital, 22; courses, 46, 48; officers of instruction, 112-23

Psychoanalytic Training and Research, Center for, special programs, 50

Public Health; School of, 18, 20, 43; courses, 46; officers of instruction, 123- 32

Radiology: courses, 48; officers of instruc- tion, 132-37

Readmission, 44

Registration: dates, 5-7; 26; late, 28

Regulations, University, 26-27

Rehabilitation Medicine: course, 48; officers of instruction, 137-40

Religious holidays and attendance, 27

Research: cancer, 19; in nutrition, 20, 50; in human reproduction, 21; in clinical genetics, 51

Residence halls, 30-31

Roosevelt Hospital Division, 24

St. Luke's Hospital Center Division, 24 St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, 23-

24 Scholarships, 31-36

Sergievsky, Gertrude H., Center, 20 Sociomedical Sciences, officers of instruc

tion, 130-31 Specialization: programs for, 49-51; grad

uate, 55 Statement of nondiscriminatory policies

17-18 Students: selection of, 25-26; medical ser

vice to, 28; financial aid, 31-40; housing

30-31; activities, 40-41 Students, roster of: First-year postgraduate

appointments: Class of 1983, 152-55

Class of 1984, 155-58; Class of 1985,

158-61; Class of 1986, 161-64; Class

of 1987, 164-66 Surgery: courses, 48; officers of instruction,

140-45

Teaching hospitals, 21-24

Teaching staff of the departments: see

under names of departments Transcripts, 30 Tropical medicine: officers of instruction,

131-32 Tuition, 28; refund of, 29

University Rights, Reservation of, 18 University Senate delegates, 10 Urology: teaching hospital, 21; course, 48; officers of instruction, 146-47

Vice President for Health Sciences, 8 Visiting professorship, 51

Washington Heights Health and Teaching

Center, 18 William Black Medical Research Center,

19,20 Withdrawal and adjustment of fees, 29

Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center Columbia University

HEALTH SCIENCES CAMPUS

1ND8TH AV IRTNO 1 LOCAL SUBWAY STATION

WEST 167TH STREET

Alumni Auditorium Augustus Long Library Dana W. Atchley Pavilion

The Babies Hospital Babies Hospital Research, Teaching, and Office Addition

Bard Hall Medical Student

Residence

Bard Haven Towers

William Black Medical

Research Building

Cancer Center/Institute of Cancer Research

Central Service Building

College of Physicians and

Surgeons

Center for Community

Health Systems

13

22

23

7 16 20

2/12

School of Dental and Oral

Surgery

Georgian Nurses

Residence

Edward S. Harkness Eye

Institute

Eye Institute Research

Laboratories

Harkness Memorial Hall

Harkness Pavilion

Pauline A. Hartford

Memorial Chapel

Julius and Armand

Hammer Health Sciences

Center

Institute of Human

Nutrition

International Institute for

the Study of Human

Reproduction

6 Anna C. Maxwell Hall, School of Nursing Residence

5 The Neurological Institute of New York

6 School of Nursing 25 Parking facilities

17 Presbyterian Hospital

New York Orthopedic

Hospital Sloane Hospital for

Women Squier Urological Clinic 4 New York State

Psychiatric Institute 4 Psychoanalytic Clinic 15 School of Public Health 19 Radiotherapy Center

13 Vanderbilt Clinic

14 Vanderbilt Clinic Addition

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

0050817817

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