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T-WAVE
1989
VOLUME VIII
TULANE UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA
Yearbook Staff
Chief Editors
Vincent Giuseffi Todd Muneses
Associate Editors
Steven Harris Wendy Male
Contributing Editors
Kristin Alline
Alton Barron
Bradley Bartholomew
Holly Bastian
Susan Ehrenthal
Ellen Loeb Gandle
Dawn George
James Goff
William Johnson
Jonathan Kiev
Steven Krems
Gerard Livaudais
Trudi Holt McGrath
Mike O'Brien
Ricky Palmon
Lilly Palmon
Gina Payton
Tony Pietroniro
Phil Roland
Vanessa Tatum
Kevin Wall
Cover Design
Steven Harris
Faculty Sponsors
Barbara Beckman, PhD
Suzanne Bergman, MD
William T. Cetalu, MD
Floyd R. Domer, PhD
Nina Dhurandhar, MBBS
E.R. Eckart, MD
Donald M. Gallant, MD
Paul S. Guth, PhD
Phillip J. Kadowitz, PhD
John E. Lewy, MD
Dennis B. McNamara.PhD
John H. Phillips, MD
Dr. Shah and Dr. Wang
Richard H. Steele, PhD
Rune L. Stjernholm, PhD
Special Thanks
To Thomas Frank for the History of Tulane Medical School section.
To John Salvaggio, M.D. for the History of Charity Hospital section.
To Al Dufour for his work with the Senior Portrait section.
To Bill Hopkins of Josten's Publishing Company for his guidance, patience, and advice.
To Kent Walker and Sarah Willard for being "model-students".
To the Tulane Medical Center Office of Public Relations and Information.
To all the parents who helped to make the Baby Pictures section possible.
To all those who contributed photographs for the yearbook.
To Ms. Maybelle Montz for her "patience" and warm sense of humor.
able Of Contents
~
Dedication 5
Naturally N'Awlins 6
History Of Tulane 10
History Of Charity Hospital 14
Administration & Faculty 20
Freshman Year 30
Sophomore Year 40
Lagniappe 50
Junior Year 66
Senior Year 76
Couples 86
Baby Pictures 92
Senior Portraits 100
Personals/Advertisements 120
/ J _
THE OATH OF HIPPOCRATES
I do solemnly swear, by whatever I hold most sacred, that
will be loyal to the profession of medicine, and just and
generous to its member^ *0
That I will lead my life and practice my Art in uprightness
and honor. .
That into whatever home I shall enter, it shall be for the
good of the sick and the well to the utmost ojlmy pjvrer, and
that I will hold myself aloof from wrong an^^Bpi°n ' ar,d
from the tempting of others to vice. r\M That I will exercise my Arfsolely for the cure of my patients
and the prevention of cpease, and will give no drug and
perform no operation for a criminal purpose, arj|l far less
suggest such a thing.
That whatever I shall see or hear of the lives IF men and
women that is not fit to be spoken, I will keep inviolably
secret.
These things I do promise, and in proportion as I am faithful
to this oath may happiness and good repute be ever mine,
the opposite if I shall be forsworn.
In Dedication
Edward McCrady Peebles, Ph. D.
Professor of Anatomy
Dr. Edward McCrady Peebles began his academic career with
the Tulane University School of Medicine following the comple-tion
of a doctorate in Anatomy at the uptown Campus in 1954.
From that time hence, he has been an instructor of Gross
Anatomy, receiving full professorship status in 1 967 and appoint-ment
as Course Director of Human Embryology in 1979. During
his tenure at Tulane, in addition to his extensive involvement in
committees and professional societies, he has been highly
regarded by fellow faculty members and students alike as re-flected
in numerous honors which have included the Owl Club
Award for Outstanding Teaching, the Mellon Award for Excel-lence
in Teaching, and election to Alpha Omega Alpha and
Omega Delta Kappa honorary fraternities.
Dr. Peebles is retiring at the completion of the 1988-89
academic year. For our class, as well, as for over three decades
of others, his teaching extended far beyond the written page,
adding a very personal touch to his lectures. His friendly de-meanor
and wealth of knowledge made it difficult for us to "take
exception" with his word. It is our only regret that future classes
will not benefit from his abundant wisdom and guidance.
I
John Joseph Walsh, M.D.
Chancellor of Tulane Medical Center
Dr. John Joseph Walsh graduated from Long Island College of
Medicine in 1948 and subsequently entered the U.S. Public
Health Service (U.S.P.H.S.). While stationed in New Orleans, Dr.
Walsh first cam to Tulane as a cardiology fellow and instructor in
Medicine under the guidance of Dr. George Burch in 1957. He
later served as Director of the Division of Direct Health Services,
U.S.P.H.S. while also an assistant surgeon general. He retired
from U.S.P.H.S. in 1968 with the rank of Rear Admiral. He
returned to Tulane to serve as Dean of the Medical School from
1968 to 1969 and then as Vice President for Health Affairs the
following year. In 1972, Dr. Walsh accepted the post as the first
Chancellor of Tulane Medical Center. He is the first Jack R. Aron
Professor of Administravtive Medicine at Tulane in addition to
being a member of Alpha Omega Alpha, Delta Omega, Kappa
Delta Phi, and Omega Delta Kappa honorary fraternities.
Over his 21 -year tenure as an administrator, Dr. Walsh has
become a cornerstone in Tulane Medicine. In his many roles, he
has exhibited with great consistency the character, leadership,
and perseverance that has enabled Tulane to remain at the
forefront of medical education. Dr. Walsh is retiring at the end of
the 1988-89 academic year. We are sorry to see him leave and
will always be indebted to him for making Tulane Medical Center
what it is today.
It is with sincerest gratitude that the Class of 1989 dedicates this yearbook
to Dr. Edward Peebles and Dr. John Walsh. We wish them and their families
all the best in the future.
Naturally N'Awlins
The phrase invites many unique and
vivid memories of the city that we
called home for at least the last four
years. Affectionately called "The Big
Easy", New Orleans offered us a multi-tude
of diversions from the daily grind
of medical school life.
For many of us the Crescent City
became synonymous with good food.
From the elegant (and expensive) res-taurants
of Commander's Palace or
Antoine's fame to the slightly more ac-cessible
corner Popeye's or Camellia
Grill, all were ready to satisfy just about
any appetite. We learned how to "suck
them heads" during crawfish boils,
"dress" our shrimp po-boys appropri-ately
of course, and "save" our lef-tovers
for the Cajun gumbo pot.
Besides the culinary diversion, New
Orleans gave us abundant sights and
sounds unique to this southern city.
Riding on the famous St. Charles
Streetcars we were treated to an archi-tectural
feast in the Garden District,
while further uptown the tranquil beau-ty
of Audubon Park filled our senses.
For those of us in need of a more
"active" diversion there was the
French Quarter, where a walk along
Bourbon Street was always an adven-ture.
Places like Preservation Hall kept
us dancing in the streets (or at least
tapping our feet) with the sounds of
timeless Jazz.
The ultimate diversion was naturally
Mardi Gras, that time of year when res-ervation
and restraint took a backseat
to raucous revelry. Immersed in the ex-citement
of parades, we eagerly await-ed
the cups, beads, doubloons, and
panties that, at least for the day, were
true treasures.
Living in New Orleans filled our four
years with newsworthy events as well.
These included visits by the Pope and
the Surgeon General. We hosted the
Republican National Convention, and
witnessed the unfortunate destruction
of the Cabildo by fire.
These experiences and others have
inspired many memories. Yet, perhaps
the fondest of these will be the ones
that make us shake our heads (in de-light
or disbelief) and think quietly to
ourselves, "Only in New Orleans!"
AUGUST 1985-JUNE 1989 FOUR YEARS OF
GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET
ADMIT ONE
1
N-MIS
HOLINESS
POPE JOHN PAUL II
CELEBRATES THE
SACRED EUCHARISTIC LITURGY
EAST LAKEFRONT CAMPUS,
UNIVERSITY OF NEW ORLEANS
SEPTEMBER 12, 1987
3:30 P.M.
Gates open at 8:00 A.N. and
close at 2:30 P.M.
All attendees must be in the
Mass enclosure by 2:30 P.M.
Exchange this ticket at the gate
for a SecHon Ticket.
(See instructions on reverse side.)
BBQ ALLIGATOI
FROG LEGS with GREEN R
1ANA STATE MUSEUM
TRANCE
KEMPER CONSTRUCTION CO
GENERAL CONTRACTORS NEW 0RLEAN5
I 'BUCAN NATK)]
GATE SECTION ROW SEAT
A 143 18 11
AUG. 16, 1988 - P.M.
Tulane University
School Of Medicine:
From the 1830's To Present
by Thomas W. Frank
The Tulane University School of
Medicine has had a rich and unique
past. It has weathered the stormiest
periods of American History, it has
become embroiled in more scandals
and imbroglios than has any political
administration in the history of the
Louisiana legislature (a dubious yet
impressive accomplishment). Yet it
has not only survived but has gone on
to play a leading role in the develop-ment
of American medical education,
and in the process has produced
some of the greatest physicians in
American History.
There were only thirteen medical
schools in the U.S. in the summer of
1832 when Dr. Warren Stone, a gruff
Vermont surgeon, boarded the steam-ship
Amelia in New York harbor. The
Amelia was bound for New Orleans
and like all passage out of New York
City in August 1832, it was booked to
capacity. Cholera had broken out in
New York and it was killing hundreds.
Four days out, the dreaded disease
broke out on the Amelia and the ves-sel
was forced to dock at Folly Island,
South Carolina. Stone, the only physi-cian
on board, cared for the sick until
he too fell prey to the disease. Several
Charleston physicians ventured to the
island to treat the ill. One of these
young doctors was Thomas Hunt.
Hunt befriended Stone and cared for
him during his bout of cholera. Both
Hunt and Stone were only twenty-four
years old, and both had big dreams.
Stone, while coarse, of vulgar speech,
and from a poor background, was an
outstanding surgeon. Hunt, on the
other hand, was articulate, well-born,
and classically educated, having at-tended
the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine. The two devel-oped
mutual respect and arranged to
meet in New Orleans as soon as for
tune would permit.
Upon the rendezvous in New Or-leans,
Stone and Hunt met up with Dr.
John Harrison of Washington, D.C.
Both Stone and Harrison received ap-pointments
at the oldest hospital in
the United States, which was Charity
Hospital of New Orleans. Eventually
these three gentlemen, Stone, Hunt,
and Harrison, decided to establish the
first medical school in the Deep South.
They met with considerable opposi-tion
from the local Paris-trained Creole
physicians who felt that a doctor could
not be properly educated without at-tending
a classical university. But
since the Louisiana Purchase of 1803,
enough Americans had settled in New
Orleans to override the resistant
French physicians. If the French influ-ence
had not been so strong, New
Orleans may have had a medical
school long before 1834. In any event,
Stone, Harrison, and Hunt teamed up
with six other local American doctors
to draft a constitution for the establish-ment
of the medical college. Dr. Hunt,
the most eloquent of the founders,
was to be the first dean and Professor
of Anatomy and Physiology. The
school was called, "The Medical Col-lege
of Louisiana" and the first clas-ses
were held in January of 1835.
There were only eleven students in
the first class and tuition, fees, room
and board came to a total of less than
four hundred dollars a year. The first
few years were difficult ones. Deans
seemed to come and go every year
and there were many abrupt faculty
changes, but still the school survived.
By 1843 there were over one hundred
students. Even then, as now, diversity
characterized the student body. Mem-bers
of the class came from Alabama,
Mississippi, New Jersey, Pennsyl-vania,
Connecticut, and Louisiana.
Top: Tulane University School of Medicine Circa
1970.
Bottom: Thomas Hunt, M.D., first Dean of the
Medical College.
10
'.'>
Top: Newspaper clipping from 1834.
Bottom: our original Constitution.
THE 1VEK.
I ttUttBD J>*W PVBLISHF.O DJULV.BV
jrhomr rwon.
T11K UNION—it »miTir. p*r«tF»»D. "
; . >i'.»iUAV MORNING, «EPT. 20, 1«34.
'.Vt .<re hii^Jv sTaiiScH to«»o"liee theentabliahment in ihi
' j'.''ffc,«(|js*' colleg*. The gentlemen who fill lhachair
fir . :*sor»hiu are mun of*kill and experience, and we-kopi
il • iri$y noi.be thought invuiiouJ, wh«n we pdim it
[inwicWSr !0 Messra. Hi'vt, i«o\lls anil f.uif.MDtai, will
. i ,n <>'U acquaintance is mtn extended. The two forinci
,»>>« S'-fore officiated in o like capacity in similar ins'iiu
r.* »n4 the latter has eatabliihed a rcputa'iun in our citj
. ^hest grade as o surgeon.
T^c p^eomer Friend, wn' run into hy the Turn JrJTrrsnn
-He Lafayetk; on Saturday, anJ 6uuk; water up lu lh(
6
Medical school in those early days
was much different than it is today. For
one thing, one needed to attend only
eight months of lectures to get the
M.D. degree. The school year was four
months long, with the second year
being identical to the first. One re-peated
the same seven courses over
again. We can only assume that these
early educators figured learning was
better the second time around.
The curriculum consisted of courses
in: Anatomy and Physiology, Chemis-try,
Materia Medica, Principles and
Practice of Medicine, Surgery, and
lastly, Obstetrics and the Diseases of
Woman and Children. The professors
received no salary per se. They were
compensated instead by selling tick-ets
to their lectures to medical stu-dents
(and whomever else would buy
them).
The Class of 1910.
11
Right: The Richardson Memorial Building on the Uptown
Campus.
Below: Anatomy class in the Josephine Hutchinson Me-morial
Building.
The instruction in the early days was
wholly didactic. Practical teaching was
given only in Anatomy. The lectures
were delivered to the entire student
body assembled in a large room or
amphitheater. Clinical subjects were
taught in the same manner. Indeed the
unmotivated students would often
graduate without having ever attended
a delivery, without observing an opera-tion,
and often without having ever
examined a patient.
Thomas H. Wade was a typical Tu-lane
medical student of the 1850's.
Like some of the students of today, he
frequently skipped classes. His free
time was spent playing kissing games
with the ladies in the parlor of his
boarding house, attending the theater,
and occasionally frequenting the local
absinthe. Wade began his medical
education in 1850 when he took a
nominal preceptorship with two practi-tioners
in his hometown. The following
year he enrolled at Tulane. He regis-tered
for the customary seven courses
and had thirty-three hours of lecture
per week. His day began at 9:30 AM
and ended at 5:30 PM. The school
year lasted from November 17th to
February 16th. His total textbook bill
was $22.00. Wade listed his total ex-penses
for the year at $420.35. Room
and board cost him only $20 per
month and his instruments were only
$4.50. Among his incidental expenses
were a physician's frock coat ($20), an
arm and two legs for dissection (10
cents each), and 10 cents worth of
candles to dissect by. While Wade
was probably the typical student, there
were a few "gunners" even in the
1850's. One such gunner was Jeptha
McKinney. The lackadaisical attitude
of certain faculty members infuriated
Jeptha who wrote, "The professors
have not given us more than one-half
the lectures this week that we are
entitled to". Jeptha graduated predict-ably
with honors in 1857. His eight
page thesis was on the subject of
pneumonia for which he recom-mended
heavy doses of mercury,
bleeding, and blistering.
Tuition and fees remained remark-ably
stable throughout the 19th cen-tury.
By 1900 it cost $150.00 for the
first two years and $165.00 for the
final two years. Professors were paid
about $3,750.00 per year with the bulk
of that still coming from ticket sales.
Between 1 907 and 1 955 the preclin-ical
and clinical years were physically
separated with the preclinical classes
held on the uptown campus and the
clinical classes downtown. The first
two years were finally moved down-town
in 1963.
In the 1 960's and early 1 970's appli-cations
to medical school began to
soar. Medical school admissions be-came
extremely competitive with Tu-lane
receiving over 5000 applications
for 148 places. Thus medical students
quickly became America's educa-tional
elite. Charity Hospital remained
the principal teaching hospital for the
Tulane students until Tulane Medical
Center was opened in 1976 which
served to add dimension to the clinical
teaching at Tulane.
Most medical Schools required an
elementary school education and high
school was desirable. An applicant
had to be of "good moral character"
and was supposed to have worked
under a preceptor for one to three
years before starting school. This re-quirement,
however, was not enforced
and was observed by relatively few
students. In fact, literacy was not even
necessary for admission and stories
abound concerning the lack of intel-lectual
achievements of mid-1 9th cen-tury
medical students.
It was rare for any medical student
prior to 1 890 to hold a college degree.
It was not until nearly the turn of the
century that Tulane required more
than a high school diploma for admis-sion
and up until 1939 any applicant
who had studied at Tulane as an un-dergraduate
was unconditionally ac-cepted
to the medical school.
Academic standards began to im-prove
in the second half of the 1 9th
century. In 1 893 the four month school
year was increased to six months and
the equivalent of one year of college
was required for admission. By 1900 a
student had to attend four different six
month sessions (two year preclinical
and two years clinical) in order to
graduate.
12
Left: TMC opened in 1976
Below: Hutchinson Memorial in 1930
By the early 1900's it became ap-parent
that there was much disparity
among the quality of medical schools.
In 1908 Abraham Flexner was sent by
the Carnegie Foundation to examine
the state of medical education. He
began his study of 155 schools at
Tulane in the winter of 1908. This
report concluded that Tulane was
ranked among the top 3 medical
schools in the South. Encouraged by
the Flexner report Tulane continued to
take great strides in improving aca-demic
requirements for admission and
the quality of its curriculum. Today
Tulane is ranked among the top 20
medical schools in the nation in terms
of both competitiveness and educa-tion
quality.
For the first eight years of the
school's existence it had no perma-nent
home. Between 1835 and 1843
lectures were delivered in such vari-ous
places as a local church, the State
House, several wards of Charity Hos-pital,
and even the professors' homes.
The school's first building was erected
in 1843 on the corner of Baronne and
Dryades streets, where the First City
Bank stands today. The professors
paid for the building out of their own
pockets and the land was donated by
the State Legislature in return for the
free services of the Tulane faculty at
Charity Hospital.
In 1847 the legislature decided to
establish a State University with the
already famous Medical College of
Louisiana as its centerpiece. Thus in
February 1847 the Medical College of
Louisiana became the Medical De-partment
of the University of Louisi-ana.
A new building was constructed
to house the increasing number of
medical students. The medical school
continued to grow rapidly and so did
its reputation. In the early 1830's a
young Baltimore businessman, Paul
Tulane, took up residence in New
Orleans and soon amassed much
wealth. Although he moved to Prince-ton,
New Jersey in 1873, he did not
forget the city that gave him so much
and in 1 882 he decided to donate 1 .25
million dollars for the establishment of
a university. The city's leaders were
able to persuade Mr. Tulane to im-prove
and privatize the existing Uni-versity
of Louisiana rather than start-ing
from scratch. So in 1884 the public
University of Louisiana became the
private Tulane University of Louisiana.
The funds from Paul Tulane's dona-tions
were used to construct what is
now the uptown campus and to im-prove
the university's academical and
law departments. In 1893, the wife of
Dr. Tobias Richardson (past Dean of
the medical school just after the Civil
War) donated money to build a des-perately
needed new complex for the
medical school. It was erected on
Canal Street near the present site of
Hawthorne Hall and opened in 1893.
For the first time, students had fully
equipped laboratories in sciences
other than anatomy. Although consid-ered
one of the best equipped medical
school buildings, by 1907 it had be-come
too small for the expanding
medical school. A wealthy patient of
Dr. Rudolph Matas, Alexander
taa ei '
i §f a
Cf ii
ii if if
I H if
If
Hutchinson, came to the rescue with a
large donation which was used to con-struct
a new Richardson building up-town.
This building was used to house
preclinical classes while the clinical
years remained downtown. The down-town
building was renamed the Jose-phine
Hutchinson Memorial Building.
In December of 1930, a new Hutchin-son
Building was opened contiguous
with Charity Hospital which was ac-claimed
as the best medical training
unit in the South. In October of 1955,
a ten story addition to the Hutchinson
Memorial was added to house the
sophomore medical departments and
in 1 963 a third addition was completed
to enable all four years to be taught
under the same roof. The 300 bed
Tulane Medical Center teaching hos-pital
was the most recent addition to
the hospital complex. It opened its
doors in 1976. Additions to this medi-cal
center are planned.
As we finally leave behind this proud
old symbol of new Orleans' medical
past, perhaps only a photographic
composite of our class adorning a
corridor on the first floor will be all that
remains to document our presence
here. But in four years we have be-come
part of Tulane's rich history. We
have contributed to both her virtues
and vices and as we leave her in the
distance, we leave part of ourselves
behind in the formaldehyde saturated
anatomy labs, the sleep-inducing lec-ture
halls, and the malodorous wards
of Charity Hospital. For it is here in this
place that we have learned to become
doctors, the latest links in a chain
forged by our 12,000 predecessors,
and the one common bond that ties us
together as a class.
13
Charity Hospital Of
New Orleans:
A Rich History, A Poor State Of Affairs
By John E. Salvaggio, MD
Henderson Professor Of Medicine
14
Charity Hospital embraces an in-triguing
and colorful past, and has
served a real purpose. It is steeped in
Louisiana history, and has survived dif-ficult
times and some of the worst po-litical
squabbles and patronage prob-lems
in the country, enduring for over
250 years primarily because it was
needed.
Its charter dates to January 1736,
when Jean Louis, a French sailor for-merly
employed by the Company of
the Indies who worked in New Orleans
as a boat builder, bequeathed his es-tate
of approximately 10,000 livres
(about $2,500 today) to the founding
and furnishing of Charity Hospital in
early French colonial Louisiana. This
makes it the oldest continually operat-ing
hospital in what is now United
States territory. (Bellevue Hospital in
New York City is also the same age,
but was established two months after
Charity.)
Perhaps it was the abandonment of
the poor, who could not be cared for at
the French military of "Royal" Hospi-tal,
that induced Jean Louis to be so
generous. Initially called the Hospital of
St. John or Le Hopital des Pauvres de
la Charite (Hospital for the Poor), its
charter came into effect upon Louis'
death.
In his wisdom, Louis appointed the
Reverend Father Philippe, Parish Cure
and pastor of St. Louis Cathedral, to
work with Councilman Raguet in dis-bursing
his legacy and running the
Hospital. Sunday collections were tak-en
in the cathedral to support it. In
addition, several local individuals made
donations of property in their wills.
On March 10, 1736, a house at
Chartres and Bienville Streets became
the first quarter for the Hospital. Pa-tients
must have been admitted imme-diately,
because only a month after its
opening the house proved to be too
small and by 1743 it became neces-sary
to replace it.
A governmental land grant at the
ship-turn at the end of a canal and
fronting on the cemetery was provided
to build the new Hospital. This location
was advantageous since supplies
could be unloaded from the ships as
well as patients transferred to or re-ceived
at the Hospital. Its proximity to
a cemetery was also of obvious advan-tage.
After Louisiana was ceded to Spain
in 1763, the French were allowed to
administer Charity for six more years.
With the arrival of Governor O'Reilly in
late 1769, however, Charity came un-der
control of church authorities and
the Spanish government, as was the
custom of such hospitals in Madrid and
other Spanish cities.
In 1779, a great hurricane wreaked
havoc upon New Orleans, reducing
Charity Hospital to ruins. Only the
kitchen and storehouse escaped its
fury. This destruction resulted in much
consternation and suffering, leaving
homeless patients to "perish upon the
streets or in some obscure corner."
Nonetheless, the Hospital survived.
During this terrible time, Don Andres
Almonester y Roxas, a former war
clerk, civil notary, and noble gentleman
born in Andalusa, Spain, came to Lou-isiana
and rescued the Hospital. He
was a leading citizen of the colony and
made a modest fortune as an owner of
retail stores adjacent to Jackson Bar-racks.
He was described by some as a
"selfless benefactor" and by others as
an "opportunistic land speculator." Al-monester
offered the huge amount of
$114,000 to rebuild the hurricane-rav-aged
Hospital. It was competed in Oc-tober
1785, and named the Charity
Hospital of St. Charles (the San Carlos
Hospital) in honor of King Charles III of
Spain.
Almonester died in 1798, probably
feeling that most of Charity's adminis-trative
problems had been solved. Yet
the problems only worsened later.
Charity Hospital Circa 1835.
In the early 1800s, the mayor of New
Orleans pleaded before the Louisiana
legislature to "Look at the Charity
Hospital and examine the state of
abandonment and deprivation to
which this institution is reduced. The
poor man preyed upon by maladies
seeks asylum and finds only a grave."
Another catastrophic event oc-curred
Friday, September 23, 1809,
when a kitchen fire quickly spread to
the wooden shingled roof and burned
the entire hospital to the ground. The
indigent sick suffered intense hardship
after this fire, and many were housed
on the upper gallery of the Cabildo,
which served as City Hall.
Louisiana became a state on April
30, 1812, and assumed full responsi-bility
for Charity Hospital on March 13,
1813. Immigrants from dozens of Euro-pean
countries, particularly Germany
and Ireland, were treated at Charity,
and by 1858 foreigners outnumbered
US natives by a ratio of six to one.
To provide additional financial aid to
Charity, taxes were placed on all con-certs
and Carnival Balls. In addition, all
theatres in New Orleans were required
to give four benefit performances an-nually.
Although an official gambling
act would not go into effect until 1923,
a tax on gaming halls were instituted
for the benefit of the hospital as early
as 1815. Further amended in 1832,
this law increased the number of gam-ing
halls and raised the tax to $7,500,
three quarters of which was designat-ed
for Charity Hospital. However, it
was the 1842 Passenger Tax paid by
all persons arriving in New Orleans
from foreign ports that ensured the
hospital's financial stability during this
period.
Five years after the great fire, the
square roughly corresponding to the
location of the current Fairmont Hotel
on Canal Street, was sold by the city to
the Administrators of Charity to build a
new hospital. Work was begun in
1815, and when completed in the
same year, the new facilities were de-scribed
as "vast and commodious, ca-pable
of caring for 120 patients."
Above: An open ward of the early 1800's.
Opposite: Don Andres Almonester y Roxas. early Charity
Hospital benefactor.
15
A great flood inundated the city the
next year and led to the creation of a
medical licensing board (The Commit-tee-
Medical) to deal with the subse-quent
terrible sanitary conditions and
medical problems. Indeed, the narra-tive
of a young Boston minister who
had visited New Orleans in that year
described the hospital as "a deep dis-grace
to any civilized or Christian
Country."
A group of citizens visiting Charity in
1818 were horrified by the condition of
patients, and complained to the gover-nor
and Hospital administrators. They
noted the Hospital's filthy condition,
and the total inadequacy of atten-dants.
They also stated that patients
had to sleep on mattresses upon which
were "visible marks of the putrid dis-charges
of those who had died on
them of the most pestilential dis-eases."
Chickens roosted in the hospital
rooms, and "their offal covered the fur-niture
in every direction." They further
reported that brick dust was used to
absorb the filth on the hospital floors,
and that it arose in clouds and choked
patients on the few occasions when
the floors were swept! It is important to
note here that many epidemics struck
the city and killed thousands from early
French colonial days through the 20th
Century.
The deterioration of the San Carol
Hospital combined with a marked in-crease
in the local population made it
apparent that new facilities were again
needed. Completed in 1833 at a cost
of $149,570, the fourth version of
Charity undoubtedly marked a miles-tone
in its history. Records show the
lower story was occupied in part by
"the Medical College," indicating that
when formed in 1834, the new Medical
College of Louisiana (now Tulane Uni-versity
School of Medicine) was locat-ed
within the hospital.
With the arrival of the Daughters of
Charity, in combination with the above
mentioned items, the overall medical
atmosphere in New Orleans was excel-lent.
The entire medical complex was,
at that time, very likely one of the best
of its kind in the world.
Charity Hospital Circa 1900. Note the addition of satellite buildings around
the main structure pictured on the previous page.
Dueling Doctors
Dueling was not uncommon in the mid-1800's and many encounters
between physicians and even professors at the Medical College took place,
each of which represents a story in itself. As an example, one acrimonious
duel involving Charity Hospital physicians was fought in 1856 between
bitter professional rivals, Drs. John Foster and Samuel Choppin, essentially
stemming from the proper treatment of a medical student who had been
shot by a law student in a Carnival ball fracas. Luckily, both Choppin and
Foster missed each other when firing their shotguns, and the entire matter
was settled without further ado.
Three years later, however, Choppin and Foster were at it again. For this
duel Foster armed himself with a self-cocking five-valve revolver and Chop-pin
with a single-valve Derringer in each of his pants pockets as well as
Bowie knife in a coattail pocket. Before Choppin could cock his pistol,
Foster shot him through the neck, injuring the jugular vein. Driven back
several feet, Choppin's right pistol discharged, wounding his own left hand.
Foster shot again, penetrating Choppin's upper thigh. Choppin then drew
his other Derringer and fired at Foster who had turned to fire at him.
Fortunately both missed. With his guns empty, Choppin drew his Bowie
knife, and with blood streaming from his neck, charged at Foster. Foster
was reluctant to kill his wounded opponent, and simply waved his revolver,
imploring Choppin to stop. Luckily for Choppin, medical students at the
scene rushed to his defense and separated the two men. Choppin's lacerat-ed
jugular vein was promptly repaired and his other injuries treated. Foster
was arrested, jailed overnight, and released the next day as Choppin, who
made a full and speedy recovery, refused to press any charges against his
opponent.
16
After the Civil War commenced in
April 1861, its chaos made little differ-ence
to Charity Hospital. Following a
series of resignations in February
1862, Ernest Lewis, a young student
intern, was appointed to administrate
the hospital at the age of twenty-one.
Lewis refused to treat General Benja-min
Butler's soldiers when Butler cap-tured
New Orleans with his flotilla and
15,000 man garrison. The General was
extremely lenient with young Lewis
even though Butler later learned that
Charity was housing Confederate sol-diers
transferred from the old marine
hospital when its supplies were cut off
following the city's surrender. Lewis fi-nally
agreed to accept the federal sol-diers,
and actually convinced Butler
that additional physicians were needed
to care for them.
During the post-war period, lottery
tickets were again sold to support the
Hospital through the Louisiana State
Lottery Company formed in 1868. The
government finally outlawed this com-pany
around 1900, but until then, it
provided (at least on paper) major sup-port
for Charity. The old Ship Passen-ger
Tax that had helped greatly in the
late 1840's and 1850's, was diverted
to the Bureau of Agriculture and Immi-gration.
Thus the Hospital's debts rose
markedly.
At this time, large numbers of blacks
were admitted to the hospital. Prior to
the War, most blacks had been treated
by private physicians on the planta-tions
where they had worked as slaves.
When they became emancipated,
more and more of them required the
services of Charity. The Charity Board
enacted a policy forbidding discrimina-tion
founded on race, color, or pre-vious
condition. However, this was in-terpreted
to mean only that care would
be provided on an equal basis, and did
not prevent the development of sepa-rate
wards for whites and blacks later
in Charity's history.
Another important advance oc-curred
at charity in 1885 when the first
ambulance service was inaugurated.
Until that time, the sick travelled to
Charity in horse-drawn wagons or simi-lar
bumpy transportation that hardly
benefited the patient. The tradition of
Charity interns riding in ambulances
lasted for almost 100 years, and was
discontinued in the 1960's.
Many new additions were made to
the Charity complex around the turn of
the century, and the hospital probably
contained almost 2,000 patient beds.
Other hospitals in the city had perhaps
only 150 beds combined, including
even the larger ones such as Touro
Infirmary and Hotel Dieu with 50 to 60
beds each.
The population of New Orleans in-creased
almost 30-fold between 1832
and 1926, while Charity's bed capacity
had less than doubled. It was during
this time period that the Hospital was
forced to place two patients to a bed,
and sometimes even a third patient on
a lower mattress near the floor.
The conclusion of World War I in
1918 signaled the arrival of another
war, that between School of Medicine
and Charity Administrators, as increas-ing
hostilities came to the fore. But the
worst was to come as Huey P. Long's
and subsequent administrations came
to power. After Long was elected in
1928, he immediately introduced a bill
in the legislature allowing the governor
to reorganize and appoint a new Char-ity
Hospital Board of Administrators.
He removed Charity's superintendent,
and replaced him with Dr. Arthur Vi-drine,
a 29 year-old Rhodes Scholar
who was engaged in rural general
practice.
Top: In the early 1900's it was common for two patients to share
one bed.
Bottom: The first ambulance service in New Orleans started at
Charity Hospital in 1885.
17
Charity Hospital Complex Circa
1940.
Medical education had become
more complex, leading to the estab-lishment
of many new clinical depart-ments
at Tulane. A special Tulane ser-vice
was also initiated at Charity. Long
made no attempt to block this move,
yet in 1930 he abruptly dismissed Dr.
Alton Ochsner, then Chairman of Sur-gery
at Tulane, from Charity, allegedly
because of Ochsner's complaints
about political constraints placed on
his attempts to build a first-rate Sur-gery
Department at Tulane. The Long-
Ochsner-Vidrine affair, together with
Tulane's failure to award Long a law
degree that he desired, quite possibly
played a role in the establishment of
the Louisiana State University Medical
School at that time. In addition, Long
enriched his campaign funds by sys-tematic
five-percent deduction from
the salaries of all Charity employees,
the so called "deduct box."
It had been clear for many years that
the Charity Hospital building, then 100
years old, again needed to be re-placed.
Following Long's assassination
on September 9, 1935, federal funds
became available to build the current
Charity Hospital, completed on June
27, 1939.
During the World War II years at
Charity, a reorganization act was
passed in the state legislature to create
the Department of Institutions. This ad-ministrative
branch was to manage all
state hospitals, causing a great deal of
political bickering. Governor Sam
Jones threatened to close the Hospital
in 1942, and parts of it were actually
closed for a while. By 1943, 400 Char-ity
physicians entered the armed ser-vices
and in 1944 there were only 131
interns and residents to staff the entire
hospital. Charity's Anesthesiology De-partment
and Blood Bank were also
reorganized during these years by Dr.
John Adriani.
Right: The old information wing has been converted
to the "Cloaca Cafe" or "The Fistula."
Far right: Sister Stanislaus (1865-1949), a former
Mother Superior for the Daughters of Charity, served
the sick faithfully.
18
Dr. Alton Ochsner leads a 1950's
"Bullpen" session.
Times-Picayune editorial cartoon on Charity's
current funding crisis.
At war's end in 1945, problems in-volving
interrelationships developed
not only for Charity, but also for the
medical schools. The Ochsner Clinic
had emerged as a large medical insti-tution
employing many of Tulane's fac-ulty
and developing its own residency
training programs. The Veterans Ad-ministration
Hospital also developed a
residency program that further com-peted
with Charity. With the rise of
LSU Medical School, the old contro-versies
between Tulane and Charity
were now simply extended to it as well.
In the late 1950's many sweeping
changes were considered for Charity
and its associated schools. In the
1960's the ugly matter of segregation
was faced and the "colored and
white" wards that were on separate
sides of the hospital were eliminated.
By the late 1960's financial prob-lems
for the Hospital and both schools
were paramount, particularly as Tulane
was increasing its residency affiliation
with hospitals other than Charity, likely
for political and financial reasons. The
crucial nature of the situation prompt-ed
the governor to visit Charity, and
the hospital's director described it as
having slipped from a position of na-tional
leadership as a teaching center
and medical institution for the poor, to
a position of inferiority. He warned that
the tight money situation at Charity
had begun to have an adverse effect
on the "life blood" of the institution,
namely its intern and residency pro-grams.
The director stated that if the
numbers of residents continued to de-crease,
the hospital would soon be in
serious trouble. Attempts were there-fore
made to improve the situation.
The Health Education Authority of
Louisiana was established to revive the
entire Tulane-LSU-Charity Hospital
complex: some progress was made,
but Charity remained essentially unaf-fected.
The Department of Health &
Human Resources, was also devel-oped
during the 1970's and control of
Charity Hospital was moved to this
large umbrella agency in Baton Rouge.
In 1974 LSU and Tulane signed an
affiliation agreement with Charity pro-viding
that at three-year intervals the
schools would alternate naming a
medical director with an associate di-rector
being appointed by the other
school. Under the new plan, a lay ad-ministrator
was named as well.
Other important contracts were
signed with Charity at this time where-by
the deans of the schools were reim-bursed
to pay faculty members for per-forming
hospital functions. Woefully in-adequate
financing continued at Char-ity,
however, and the hospital has lost
its accreditation on several occasions
since 1975. This was threatening, not
only for Charity, but for both schools
and the entire medical education pro-cess.
At present the Hospital's grossly in-adequate
financing appears to be
worse than ever despite a consistently
high inpatient census and an outpa-tient
clinic load that border on intoler-able.
During the last year alone there
have been several severe cuts in the
hospital's budget. The situation at
Charity has led to alleged poor working
conditions for physician and student
alike, and to reprimands by national
residency review and accreditation
committees.
And while many plans for problem
solving are currently being developed
the question remains, "Is this grand old
institution a nineteenth century anach-ronism
or can it be properly financed,
funded, and equipped to provide the
excellent care for patients and teach-ing
opportunities for medical students
that it has in the past?" Although the
future cannot be predicted with any
accuracy, one can only hope that fu-ture
administrations will act favorably
on initiatives to improve the relatively
poor state of affairs that currently ex-ists.
19
Administration
Eamon M. Kelly, PhD
President
Tulane University
John J. Walsh, MD
Chancellor
Tulane Medical Center
James T. Hamlin, III, MD
Dean Emeritus School of
Medicine
Blackwell B. Evans, MD
Acting Dean/Chairman of
Urology School of
Medicine
:
'
Clyde G. Huggins, PhD
Associate Dean for
Curricular Affairs
Morris D. Kerstein, MD
Associate Dean of
Graduate Medical
Education
Martin S. Litwin, MD
Associate Dean
Director, Faculty Practice
Plan
James S. Storer, MD
Associate Dean of Clinical
Affairs
Mary S. Baker Nita Julia C. Heine Jean White
Assistant to the Breckenridge Administrative Administrative
Dean Administrative Assistant Assistant for
Assistant Financial Aid
20
Admissions
Gayle A. Sayas Judy Boihem
Administrative Administrative
Assistant to Dean Assistant
Newman
Roselyn
Marshall
Secretary
W. Clifford Newman,
PhD
Associate Dean and
Director of Admissions
Joseph C. Pisano, PhD
Assistant Director of
Admissions Chairman.
Financial Aid
Student Affairs Kathy Muller
Administrative
Assistant
Carol A. Gaudet Melinda Smiley Dionne M.
Administrative Administrative Weber
Assistant to Dean Assistant Secretary
Tomlinson
Wallace K. Tomlinson,
MD
Associate Dean of
Student Affairs MEdREP
Anna C. Epps, PhD
Associate Dean
Director, Student
Services & MEdREP
Office of Student Services and MEdREP
Front Row: Deidre Allen, Clothilde Johnson, and Laura Rivera. Back
Row: Louise Rachal, Justine Parker, Jeanne Burke. Lois Cherrie, Pam
Luman, Yolanda Chaisson, and Ruth Post. 21
Faculty
Anatomy
VJm
Robert D. Yates, Mary B.
PhD Anderson, PhD
Chairman/ Endocrinology
Cytochemistry
l-Li Chen, PhD Catherine G. James R. Jeter, Gerald S. Kirby, Joseph A. Pamela J. Moore
Immunocyto- Cusick, PhD PhD PhD Mascorro, BS PhD
chemistry Neuroanatomy Cell Biology Biomechanics Neurocytology Reproductive
Anatomy
ni^mm
Edward M. Richard W. M. Robert Leon B. Walker, Joseph T. Weber
Peebles, PhD Rieck, PhD Vaupel, PhD PhD PhD
Embryology/ Neuroanatomy Embryology/ Kinesiology Neuroanatomy
Teratology Teratology
Biochemistry
Rune L. William H. William Cohen,
Stjernholm, PhD Baricos, PhD PhD
Chairman/ Enzymology Enzymology
Chemotherapeutics
Melanie Ehrlich, Eugene Hamori,
PhD PhD
Molecular Biology Physial
Biochemistry
t —« r-^rt
Yu-Teh Li, PhD James E. Manie K. Richard H. Jen-Sie H. Tou
Chemical Muldrey, PhD Stanfield, PhD Steele, PhD PhD
Pathology
77
Nutrition Bioorganic
Chemistry
Cellular Energetics Phospholipid
Metabolism
Dr. Hamori prepares his friend for the
"command performance".
Pathology
C*«* A.
v
X
Michael A. Stave M.
Gerber, MD Covington, MD
Chairman /Hepatic Clinical/Surgical
Pathology Pathology
Philip Daroca, Jr, H. Nina
MD
Surgical/
Pulmonary
Pathology
Dhurandhar,
MBBS, DCP
Surgical/
Cytopathology
LX7
Kenneth B.
Farris, MD
George L. William H. Luer, Pamela C. Harry T. Pigman, Donald R.
Leonard, MD MD Martin, MD MD Pulitzer, MD
Blood Bank Surgical Pathology Surgical Pathology Clinical Pathology/ Surgical/
Autopsy Dermatopathology
Lynn Bernal-
Green, MD
Jame* C. Harkin, Friedricht Harris,
Clinical Pathology Microbiology/
Hematology
MD
Neuropathology
MD
Surgical Pathology
>
Richard J. Reed,
MD
Surgical/
Dermatopathology
Norberto A.
Schor, MD
Surg. Pathology/
Carcinogenesis
Patrick D.
Walker, MD
Surgical /Renal
Pathology
Microbiology & Immunology
A. Arthur
Gottlieb, MD
Chairman/
Immunology
Lee A.
Henderson, PhD
Immunology
John D.
Clements, PhD
Enteric Pathogens
Judith K. Domer,
PhD
Mycology
Gerald J.
Domingue, PhD
Renal Bacteriology
Robert F. Garry
Jr, PhD
Virology
Emmett J.
Johnson, PhD
Microbial Genetics
Mary K. Johnson,
PhD
Bacterial Toxins
Laura S. Levy,
PhD
Virology
Patricia A.
Mayeux, MS
Laboratory
Instructor
Dr. Johnson belts out another tune from the
Broadway bound "Microbius the Marvelous
Microbe". 23
Medicine
C. Thorpe Ray, John E. Kevin P. Mary R. Gervais Deborah
MD Salvaggio, MD Newman, MD Program Abernathy, MD
Acting Chairman/ Past Chairman/ Student Director/ Coordinator Hermatology/
Cardiology Immunology Cardiology Oncology
Naurang M. W. Abe Andes, Daniel E. Banks
Agrawal, MD MD MD
Gastroenterology Hematology/ Pulmonary
Oncology Research
-\
H. William German Mora- Suzanne Dennis W. Robert E. Burch, William T. Emmelt B. Fernando P.
Barkman, Jr, MD Beltran, MD Bergman, MD Boulware, MD MD Cefalu, MD Chapital, MD Chirino, MD
Clinical Hematology/ Nephrology Rheumatology Clinical Nutrition Endocrinology Internal Medicine Professor Emeritus
Pulmonology Oncology
Eileen M. Cook,
MD
Nephrology
Robert
Dillenkoffer, MD
VA-Cardiology
Dean B.
Ellithorpe, MD
Clinical
Pulmonology
Atilla Ertan, MD
Gastroenterology
Thomas D. Giles,
MD
VA-Chief/CV
Laboratory
Tejas Godiwala, Oren B. Gum, Charles G.
MD MD Haddad, MD
Gastroenterology Rheumatology Internal Medicine
Robert A. Newton E. Robert N. Jones, Guler Karcioglu, Abba J. Kastin, Peter F. Kohler, N. Kevin Krane, William J.
Hammer, MD Hyslop, MD MD MD MD MD MD LaCorte, MD
Gastroenterology Infectious Disease Pulmonary Internal Medicine VA Clinical Nephrology Primary Care
Research Neuroendocrine Immunology
Lab
Juan Lertora,
MD, PhD
Clinical
Pharmacology
Manuel Lopez,
MD
Immunology
Laboratory
John H. Phillips, Antonio C. Carlos M. Kathleen L. Armando E. Ruiz, Brian C. Rydwin,
Jr, MD Quiroz, MD Ramirez, MD Rives, MD MD MD
Cardiology Cardiology Pulmonology Endocrinology VA-Endocrinology Cardiology
24
*m r»
Gary E. Sander, Sudhir V. Shah, Walter J. Karen A. Karl Tornyoa, MD John D. Wallin, Hans Weill, MD Jonathan Wise
MD, PhD MD Stuckey, MD Sullivan, PhD VA-Hemalology/ MD Pulmonary MD
Cardiology Nephrology Hematology/
Oncology
HLA-Laboralory Oncology Nephrology Research Endocrinology
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Jm .//
Martin L. Pernod, Manoj K. Biswas, Simie Degefu, Roberta Gollin, Eduardo Herrera, Pamela J. Moore, April G. O'Quinn, Paul R.
MD MD MD MD MD PhD MD Summers, MD
Chairman/High- Maternal-Fetal Gynecological Obstetrics/ Gynecology Course Director Gynecological Infectious Disease
Risk Pregnancy Studies Oncology Gynecology Oncology
Ian Thorneycroft, John C. Weed, Carol Wheeler
PhD, MD MD MD
Endocrinology Gynecology Endocrinology
Community Medicine Genetics
t
J!
Irwin Cohen, MD, Joseph T. Robert Little, George Mitchell, Emmanuel Miriam G. Maria Varela, MD
MPH & TM Hamrick, MD, MD, MPH & TM MD, MPH Shapira, MD, Blitzer, PhD Cytogenetics
Infectious Disease/ MPH Family Practice Health Care PhD Biochemistry
Peds Health Care
Administration
Systems Director, Hayward
Center
25
Pediatrics
John E. Lewy,
MD
Chairman/
Nephrology
Johnetle M.
Frentz, MD
Endocrinology
1*3 ^Ji
Robert
Beckerman, MD
Pulmonology
Franklin
Boineau, MD
Nephrology
Robert Daum,
MD
Infectious Disease
Scott H. Davis,
MD
Pulmonology
Daniel A. Deane,
MD
Pulmonology
Richard D.
deShazo, MD
Allergy/
Immunology
William L. Gill,
MD
Neonatology
Jerome S. Haller,
MD
Child Neurology
Robert L.
Hopkins, MD
Pulmonology
James R.
Humbert, MD
Hematology/
Oncology
Dahlia
Kirkpatrick, MD
Hematology/
Oncology
Katherine M.
Knight, MD
Ambulatory
Pediatrics
Jane E. Margaret Smith, Thomas G.
Reynolds, MD MD Storch, MD
Neonatology Infectious Disease Neonatology
Jean Takenaka,
MD, MPH
Neonatology/
Public Health
Russell Van
Dyke, MD
Infectious Disease
Nell Pape
Waring, MD
Allergy/
Immunology
William W.
Waring, MD
Pulmonology
W. Michael
DeVoe, MD
Neonatology
Arthur S. Pickorf,
MD
Pediatric
Cardiology
James A. Wright,
MD
Gastroenterology
Parasitology
Jack H.
Esslinger, PhD
Falarial Systems
Emile A. Malek,
PhD
Malacology
;M
Robert G.
Yaeger, PhD
Protozoology
Epidemiology
Robert Franklin, Elizabeth Holt,
MD, MPH DrPH
Epidemiology Epidemiology
26
Pharmacology
4~r "
J
.
m
James W Fisher, Krishna C.
PhD Agrawal, PhD
Chairman/ Cancer
Hematopharma- Chemotherapy
cology
Barbara
Beckman, PhD
Hematopharma-cology
Craig W.
Clarkson, PhD
Cardiac
Pharmacology
Floyd R. Domer,
PhD
Anesthesia
Pharmacology
William J. Paul S. Gulh, Philip J.
George, PhD PhD Kadowitz, PhD
Toxicology Neuropharma- Cardiovascular
cology Pharmacology
Juan Lertora, Dennis Theodore Wang
MD, PhD McNamara, Jr. MD
Clinical PhD Clinical
Pharmacology Subcellular
Pharmacology
Pharmacology
Physiology
The Drs. Domer on the edge of their seats awaiting the
annual
start of the first
"Talent Show".
L. Gabriel Navar,
PhD
Chairman/Renal
Physiology
F. Edward
Dudek, PhD
Neurophysiology
Nicholas DiLuzio,
PhD
Past Chairman
Larry P. Feigen,
PhD
Cardio-Renal
Physiology
John Fox, PhD
Calcium
Metabolism
Richard Harrison,
PhD
Reproductive
Physiology
Norman R.
Kreisman, PhD
Neurophysiology
Robert F. Lowe,
PhD
Cardiovascular
Physiology
Mary V. Nekola,
PhD
Endocrinology
Joseph C.
Pisano, PhD
Cell Physiology
Benjimen
Walker, PhD
Pulmonary
Physiology
Marian R.
Walters, PhD
Endocrinology
27
Psychiatry & Neurology
/>
c j*
/*
Daniel K.
Winstead, MD
Chairman/Adult
Psychiatry
Marc A. Forman,
MO
Vice-Chairman/
Child Psych.
Joseph B. Green, Teal F. Bennett, Richard Dalton, Jorge Damns, Edward M. Arthur W.
MD DrPH Jr, MD PhD Duncan, PhD Epstein, MD
Past Chairman/ Adult Psychology Child Psychiatry Child Psychology Adult Psychology Adult Psychiatry
Neurology
Edward F. Donald M. James R. Gay, Phillip T. Griffin, Jerome S. Haller, Robert G. Heath, Carol A. Leal, David H. Mielke.
Foulks, MD, PhD Gallant, MD PhD PhD MD MD MD MD
Adult Psychiatry Substance Abuse Child Psychology Adult Psychology Child Neurology Professor Emeritus Child Psychiatry Adult Psychiatry
Betty Ann Sonia M. Nunez, Patrick O'Neil, Jose M. Pena, Pallyath Sarala,
Muller, MD MD MD MD MD
Child Psychiatry Neurology Adult Psychiatry Adult Psychiatry VA-Neurology
Barry D. Morteza Antonio Stazio,
Schwartz, PhD Shamsnia, MD MD
Adult Psychology Neurology VA-Neurology
k '
Samuel A.
Trufant, MD
VA-Neurology
Michael Wall, MD Leon A.
Neurology Weisberg, MD
Neurology
A few of the Tools of the Trade.
28
Surgery
Walts R. Webb,
MO
Chairman/CT
Surgery
I. William
Browder, MO
General Surgery
R. Davilene
Carter, MD
Oncological
Surgery
Edward
Etheredge, MD
Transplantation
Lawrence S. Fox,
MD
Cardio-Thoracic
Surgery
Edward T. Martin S. Litwin, Norman Peter V. Patricia
Krementz, MD MD McSwain, Jr, MD Moulder, MD Moynihan, MD
Oncological General Surgery Emergency/ CT/Vascular Pediatric Surgery
Surgery Trauma Surgery Surgery
£*1
Samuel Perry,
MD
Plastic Surgery
Daniel S. Rush,
MD
Vascular Surgery
Carl M.
Sutherland, MD
Oncological
Surgery
I 1
William M.
Swartz, MD
Plastic Surgery
I
Relaxing comfortably in the Surgery Lounge, Dr. Ray
Haddad awaits his next case - the morning "snack
tray".
William D.
Hardin, MD
Pediatric Surgery
James W. C.
Holmes, MD
Colo-Rectal
Surgery
Morris D.
Kerstein, MD
Vascular Surgery
f*» *I '- - \
<d\k V
James H.
Muchmore, MD
Oncological
Surgery
Ronald L.
Nichols, MD
Infectious Disease
Joseph
Nigliazzo, Jr, RN
ACLS/ATLS
Editor's Note: Some members of the
Faculty were not available to be
photographed, and regretably do not
appear here. In several instances,
those pictured are representative of
the departments when the Class of
1989 was enrolled in their courses.
29
Freshman Year
1985- 1986
Class Officers SEC Officers
President President
Frederick Azar Shelby Wilbourn
Vice President Vice President
Gordon Cohen Catherine Wheeler
Treasurer Treasurer
Jon Wong Anna Lou
Secretary Secretary
Shawn Robertson Michele Lajaunie
Honor BoardAndrew Wong, Colleen Hawthorne
30
The Year, In Review
Bernard Goetz guns down four black teenagers in a New York subway - he claims self
defense.
Space shuttle Challenger explodes just after launching, killing seven crew members.
TWA flight 847 hijacked in Beirut, holding 39 Americans hostage for 17 days.
Corazon Aquino challenges Marcos' reign in the Philippines.
Over 7,000 people die in earthquake in Mexico City, Mexico.
LIVE AID raises millions of dollars for the hungry in Africa.
Titanic is discovered in the depths of the Atlantic Ocean after 73 years.
Sale if lUD's halted.
President Reagan undergoes minor surgery to remove rectal polyps.
Pete Rose hits his way past Ty Cobb in the record books with 4,191 lifetime hits.
Died: Yul Brenner (65), Ruth Gordon (88), Orson Welles (70), Karen Ann Quinlan (31),
Konstantine Chernenko (73).
The Typical Freshman Medical Student
Condition: Encephalopenic Freshmaniasis
Chief Complaint: "It hurts when 1 sit"
Signs & Symptoms: Weight loss, diaphoresis, unresting
tremor, gunner pen
Tic, formalin pseudomembrane, leva-tor
ani muscle
fatigue, characteristic odor, persistent
lecture
attendance
Diagnostic Tests: Head CT, cranial transillumination, i
Tab titers
Rorschach Response: "1 see fibrous connective tissue" ;
Treatment: Psychodynamic psychotherapy and
fresh air
Prognosis: Poor
"Isn't that a branch of the recurrent
laryngeal nerve?"
"It sounds O.K. to me ... what's it
for?"
"I think my cadaver was on that before
he died."
"How should I know . . . we'll learn
about the abnormal stuff next year."
31
T1 Labs:
Lab A with Dr. Kirby
Lab B with Dr. Cusick
Lab C with Dr. Walker
32
Home Away From Home
Lab D with Dr. Harlan
Lab F with Dr. Chen
Lab E with Dr. Moore and Dr. Peebles
33
We've Grown
Accustomed To
The Place
Wendy Jo and Wendy Sue Need
ALL of Their Study Aids . .
. . . While Vince Gets by With the
Bare Essentials
Jim Demonstrates That There's More
Than One Way to Skin a Todd
mtimitmr
34
Kristin Caught in a Rare Moment
NOT Asking a Question
What's so Funny About Green Fibro-
Cartilage and Elephant Retina?
While Dr. Vaupel Admires the
Transition From Simple Columnar to
Stratified Squamous Epithelium . . .
. . . The Class Applauds in
Appreciation
35
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Top Photo: Jim, Lauren, Kristin, and
Chris
36
Mimi, John, Debbie, and Ellen
'Big Dick" Dr. Rieck and Gina
Jeannette, Jim, Amy, and Gordon
Ken, Noel, Barbara, Keith, Andrea,
Andy, Lilly, and Jon
37
We All Had Our Ways Of
Trudi, and Dan Get Lei'd at Luau.
Miss Manners (Anne Dopson)
Demonstrates the Proper Way to Study
Histology.
Forgetting About Books For Awhile
Bones & Books: Tools of the T-
1 Trade. For Some, the First of
Many Mardi Gras' to Come. For
the Old Pros, the Mood was a
Bit More Sedate.
During Those "Fresh"man Days
the Faces Were Brighter, the
Times Less Complicated, and
the Hair for Some a Little Fuller
than Today.
Sophomore Year
1986- 1987
Class Officers SEC Officers
President
Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
Gerald Livaudais
Wes Ely
James Goff
Dana Edwards
President
Vice Presidenl
Treasurer
Secretary
Catherine Wheeler
t James Mayer
Cliff Selsky
Frederick Azar
Honor Board Andrew Wong, Scott Beatse
Lilly Palmon, James Marshall
40
The Year In Review
Oliver North indicted as the Iran Contra scheme is uncovered.
Chernobyl disaster - nuclear power plant explodes sending radioactive dust over Northern
Europe.
"Baby Doc" Duvalier goes into exile from Haiti.
Centennial celebration for the Statue of Liberty in New York City.
Cling Eastwood begins his political career as Mayor of Carmel, California.
Voyager completes the first nonstop flight around the world.
Jarvis 7 artificial heart recipient, William Schroeder, dies after multiple strokes.
AZT approved for the treatment of AIDS.
Prince Andrew marries "Fergie" - Sarah Ferguson.
Adrenal implant in brain tissue proves beneficial for four patients with Parkinsonism.
Deaths: James Cagney (86), Benny Goodman (77), Carey Grant (82), Georgia O'Keefe
(98), Otto Preminger (80), Len Bias (22), Ricky Nelson (45).
The Typical Sophomore Medical Student
\^_ Condition:
Chief Complaint:
Signs & Symptoms:
Diagnostic Tests:
Rorschach Response:
Treatment:
Prognosis:
Suppurative Sophomorrhea
"I can't seem to rule out SLE"
Quiz Bowl amnesia, finds Farris jokes funny, parasito-logy
proctor-induced aggression, tendency to buy Im-reg
stock, stethaphonaphobia,squinty-eye syndrome,
multiple sacral decubiti
Stool OCP, ANA (will be + 80-85 % of the time or is it
10-15%?), anti-K type antibodies
"I see a caseating granuloma"
Clean white coat and directions to Charity
Guarded
At A Cocktail Party
"You're a medical student ... my doc-tor
prescribed LOpressor, what do you
think?"
That's Metoprolol, isn't it?"
"The advantages of Beta blockade
have proved to be very effective in the
control of angina pectoris."
"As a cardioselective 'Beta -I receptor
antagonist', it may be the drug of
choice over nonseslective agents for
certain patients."
'What is your 'mahn-ten-ence' dose?"
41
T2: A Test Every Week,
Richard Coaches Some Special
Olympians in the True Tulane Spirit
Juliet, Steve, Debbie, and Keith
"Study" Pharm at the Beach
»^^%
^Hy**^ .-T-iAi^ft^^ri^V -
4
m
i
?
Andy and Mimi Enjoy a Day on
Beautiful Lake Ponchatrain?
Al and Steve "Hit the Wall" at the 6K
Mark of the Crescent City Classic
42
But On The Weekend
Lisa & Ellen Flash Their Chesire
Grins
43
We Shared In The Fun
Clockwise from Right: Kaye Relaxes After a Plate Full of
Delicious Mudbugs. Bill & Lisa Help a Fellow AMSA Member
During Its National Convention in New Orleans in March of
1987. Vic Shows Off the One That Didn't Get Away. Julio
Opts for the "Portable Punchbowl" at the Luau Festivities.
Ruth Makes Another Valuable Deposit. Because He Was a
Bad Boy This Year, Robert "The Guv" Eubanks Didn't Get
His Election XMas Wish From Santa (Patricia Mengoni).
44
And Games Together
During a Temporary Ceasefire, the Flag Raiders Pose for a
Portrait.
Clockwise: Margot, Lilly, & Suzie Smile for the Camera. We
All Slept Easier at Night Knowing the Note Service Was in
Very Competent Hands. Diana, Tyler, Al, Steve, and Christine
Pay Tribute to the Late Dr. Burch. As the Luau Punch Takes
Its Toll, "Unusual" Behavior Reigns.
Clockwise at Right: Awaiting Hurricanes
Often Had Their Lighter Moments. John
and Francois Encourage Special
Olympians at the Starting Line. Kristin,
Ingrid, & Isaac Enjoy a Sunny Weekend
Party. Lauren, Dave, Steve, & Dee Take
Time Off From Studying to Socialize. Jon
Seems to be Overcome by a Typical New
Orleans Summer Day, While Gina Takes it
All in Stride.
>><:>,"'
• !'-,.
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Brian Growls Uneasily, Preventing
Others From Approaching His
"Prey".
Clockwise from Right: At the Top of
the 10 Man Stack (Not Shown), Bill
& Robert Get the Best View at Jazz
Fest. Shawn Does Her Part Helping
Out at the Limbo Party. Cindy Lends
a Helping Hand to a Special
Olympian. Barbara Attempts,
Unsuccessfully, to Remove the
Puppy From Terry's Grasp. Another
Barbara Enjoys a More Civilized
Moment, Tea Time at Windsor Court.
Below: PD Class Familiarized Us
With the "Red Reflex"; Some the
Hard Way.
J
- - \
'
We Survived
Ted, Curtis, and Dan
Best
The Schwegmann Bag Boy
Miss Alabama, Miss Florida, and
Miss Louisiana
' :
48
Room 6065
James and Tony Discuss the New
Corvette
Phil, Victor, and Patricia Rejoice Now
That Heart Sounds Are Finally Over
Class Attention Varies From Seat to
Seat
Anne, Brit, Kelvin, and Leslie Sit in
Their Assigned Seats
49
Les Bons Temps Roulent
Carrie and Barbara Make an Entrance
Gordon Getting in the Mood
v -=* ^M
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Rodney and John Get (Serious) at Ca
daver Ball '86
Curtis Eating American Sushi
Un-Named Crawfish Sucks Ron's
Head
50
Ricky with a Surprise Package
Richard with a Surprise Package of
His Own
Cindy, Diana, Gary, Trudi, and Todd
Share in Some Good Cheer
Ellen & Jeannette Demonstrate the
Double Heimlich Maneuver
Josh and a Few Friends
51
A Time To Work, A Time To Play
Tony Goes For the Savage Tan
Howard Dreams . . . "Chairman of
Medicine, Surgery, or Ob/Gyn"
Lilly and Sue, Tea for Two
Moonstruck
"Is Dat fo Heah O-Ta-Go?'
A Marianne & Theresa Talk About
Suzette in Her Absence
And Now For Something Completely Different
Brad Makes His Mark on Jenny
Steve Heats Up Next to Karen
Steve and Wendy Dress as Lawyers
54
Dawn and Lisa Elicit the Services of
Freddy and Mike
Patty and John Enjoying a Warm
Cup Of Blood
Christine Compares Her Club to
Steve's S2 Through S4
Tony and Steve celebrate the end of
"Bloody October"
Kristin Illustrates That "You Are
What You Drink"
Dr. Harlan, Darin, Steve Hopkins,
and Angelique Compare Costumes
55
Lagniappe Layout
Terry Thinks, "I'd Rather Be Hunting"
Rodney Adjusts Carey's Rabbit Ears
To Pick Up the Saints Game
Bill With Debie and Wendy (Naked
From The Neck Down . . .
Jim Putting Our Money Where His
Mouth Is
Kevin Performs CPR On the Toilet
56
Holly Thinks, "I Should Have Been a
Model"
Debbie Does Dinner
Jt
Kent Prepares for Lewy Rounds
Myra & James Dress for Success
57
So, Why Did You Pick Tulane?
Dana and Trudi Forget to Consult the
Clairol Color Chart
The Beef People" Arrive
Ken and Jon Show an Out of Town
Friend How to Celebrate "Nawlins
Style"
Throw Me Sumptin' Mister!'
58
The French Quarter Decorates for Fat
Tuesday
As Rex Rolls, the Days Festivities
Come to an End
Wes and Kim Display Some of Their
Earnings While Enjoying a Parade
59
Broadway Comes To Tulane
Avenue
The Vaupel Shuffle
When you & your friends go out to
the lab
Don't spend too much time with that
stiff on the slab
Get out of the fat
Get out of the muscle
Take out your scopes and do the
Vaupel Shuffle
Chorus
T1, T1 (Echo), Well a yuck, yuck,
yuck, yuck
Identify, identify. Woob, woob, woob
Well if you wanna' pass, then just
study your glass
And do the Vaupel Shuffle
Well you & your friends, you love
Leon & Ed
You step out of lab, and you smell
like the dead
It's not a delight to dissect & hustle
So throw out your probes & do the
Vaupel Shuffle
Chorus
Well you & your friends, you all hate
to see
Anatomy tapes on a busted T.V.
So let out a scream, don't let it be
muffled
Get off your ass! And do the Vaupel
Shuffle
Chorus
60
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Maul. Wl aiHU
Joey and Daryl
Dana, Lisa, and Carrie
Tony, Jerry, Darin, and Jim
Suzanne, Wendy, Steve, Kevin W.
Kevin J., and Dan
61
Time To Spare . . .
Peter and Al Take a Well Needed
Break After Conquering the "Bunny
Slope"
Miguel and Leonel in a Rare Moment
Together
62
Tyler Poses for a GQ Layout
Debbie Takes In Some Light Reading
Between Sets
Mimi "On the Rocks
Watch Out Paul Prudhomme, Here
Comes Chef Kevin
Suds and Anne Share the Spotlight
Mike and Stephen Feed Bob Alligator
Andy Tries Out New Orthopedic Equip-ment
Larry, Gina, Colleen, James, and Anna
Share a Birthday Cake with Howard
and Tracie
63
A Day In The Life
Gina, For a Few More Dollars, You
Could Have Had the Whole Dress
Leslie Introduces Miss Venus (Debbie
To Miss Mars (Ann
Splash "Two" Starring Fariba and Su-sie
The Original Party Animals (Chris,
Shaun, and Laeton). Above: Suzanne
and Jon Celebrate National Dental
Week
Junior Year
1 987 - 1 988
President
Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
Honor Board
Class Officers
Gerald Livaudais
Kevin Wall
James Goff
Dana Edwards
Andrew Wong, Scott Beatse
Lilly Polmon, James Marshall
SEC Officers
President
Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
James Mayer
Frederick Azar
Gordon Cohen
Jacquleen Dano
The Year In Review
66
Pope John Paul II tours North America, including the City of New Orleans. New York State
moves to reduce residents' hours.
First AIDS case trace to 1969 - much earlier than previously thought.
Jessica Hahn and Jim Bakker "couple" to bring down the PTL empire.
The country celebrates the 200th anniversary of the United States Constitution.
Stocks plunge 508 points amid panic trading.
Mathius Rust lands his plane in the middle of Red Square in Moscow.
Baby Jessica (18 months) is rescued from a 22 feet deep well while the whole country
watches.
President Reagan's nominee, Robert Bork, rejected as Supreme Court Justice.
Deaths: Fred Astaire (88), William Casey (74), Henry Ford II (70), Jackie Gleason (71), Rita
Hayworth (68), Rudolph Hess (93), Danny Kaye (74), Liberace (67), Lee Marvin (63),
Robert Preston (68), Andy Warhol (58).
The Typical Junior Medical Student
Condition:
Chief Complaint:
Signs & Symptoms:
Diagnostic Tests:
Rorschach Response:
Treatment:
Prognosis:
Subacute Sclerosing Junioralgia
"I can't stand clear of the closing doors"
Generalized malaise, blunted affect, blueberry muffin
intolerance, Cujo fever, "Chinese restaurant syn-drome",
consults Weisberg on fashion, VA ward
clerk-induced emesis, hypochondriasis
Sleep-deprived EEG, fasting blood sugar
"I see a warm, soft pillow resting gently upon a very
large bed with a cup of hot cocoa . . . all is suspended
in quietness and solitude and I do not see any blood
gas kits nearby . . . There is a door and behind it I see
an incredibly huge decubitus ulcer trying to pick the
lock"
REM sleep, caloric intake, a bath
Good
At A Cocktail Party
I "I think that's the drug on my pen-light."
''You're a medical student ... my
doctor prescribed Lopressor, what
do you think?"
"The Tenormin drug rep throws much
better lunches."
"I'm rotating through Neuro/Psych
now, ask me in two months when I'm
on Medicine."
"Why, do you have high blood pres-sure?"
67
Working The Wards
Clockwise: Susie & Tessy Wait Their
Turn For the Terminal While Dave
Smiles for the Camera. Dana Delivers
Her First "Gurr'l". Dave Forces a
Smile While on "Short" Call at the
VA. Sue Diagrams the "Ehrenthal
Approach" to the Bilroth II. Vince
Nervously Smiles as He Picks Up Yet
Another Paranoid Schizophrenic
During His Psychiatry Rotation.
'
HSB^P
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Clockwise: Joey, Howard, and Dave
Discuss Their Patients on Rounds.
Jerry Hopes That One Day He
Becomes Famous Enough to Have
His Brain Displayed in the Surgery
Library. Andy Arrives at CHNO
Wide-eyed and Ready to Cure. Tom
Refuses to Allow a Night on Call to
Stand Between Him and a Good
Time. Undaunted by Dr. Harris'
Presence, Curtis Properly Identifies a
Bezoar under 400X. Brad Brushes
Up on His Ventriloquist Act for the
Upcoming Talent Show.
Progress Notes • • •
Clockwise: Chris Confirms His
Self-Diagnosis of Mitral Valve
Prolapse With the Help of a
Second Opinion. Dave Kraus
Catches Up on Some Much
Needed Sleep During Surgery in
His Charity "Suite". Karen Holds
Direct Pressure After Her "First
Stick" With a Very Cooperative
Patient. Susan, Dee, and Cindy
Hold Their Urology Resident (Gary
Hurwitz) Captive.
Clockwise: Isaac, Ingrid, Al, Pat, and
Rob Sit Down in the Student Lounge
and Compare Notes. With No Time
to Spare on Call, Scott Combines
Taking a Shower With Doing His
Laundry. Brian & Josh Awake From
Medicine Lecture to Find Everyone
Else Gone. Jim Tries, Unconvincingly,
to Explain His Tardiness for Morning
Rounds to His Resident (Mike
Archie). The Calm Before the Storm
at Charity ER.
*mm?
f
-
Clockwise: Dianna & Dan Share Some Juicy
Gossip at the School Mailboxes. Charity Wards,
Where "Semi-Private" Takes on a Whole New
Meaning. Suzette & Debbie, Still Fresh and
Smiling, Are Obviously Not Post-Call. Reading the
"Yellow Book" For Surgery Has Different
Meanings to Different People. Dave Tries His Best
to Break the Sterile Field Prepared By Scott.
Left: Richard Soaks Up the Library "Ambiance".
Clockwise: Steve Caresses One of the Smaller
Charity Hospital Patients. Lisa, Debbie, Ron, &
Jim Nervously Prepare For Staff Rounds. Karen,
Shawn, & Ingrid Get a Few Pointers From an
Experienced T-4 (Barbara Carroll).
MBMMHMMHHBB
m
73
Clockwise: Heading Home Early,
Moon and Vanessa Are Glad to be
on NeuroPsych. Mimi Practices
Riding Side Saddle at Golden Gate
Park. Back at Home, Ted Practices
Animal Husbandry. Cold Beer &
Good Friends: Who Could Ask for
Anything More? Center: Margot and
Ken Enjoy a Quiet Moment Together
INShaun, Kent, and Lisa Attend a
Weekend Party.
Clockwise: Anna and Gina Take a
Break From Lecture. Juliet Relaxes
on the RiverWalk. Pee Wee Herman
(Jerry) and Debbie Entertain the Kids
at Diabetic Camp. Bill and Lisa Wind
Down with Yet Another Subtitled
Foreign Film.
Senior Year
F"1"^^*kVEL_— :.^|^S«eli r
• si'
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1988-1989
Class Officers SEC Officers
President Gerald Livaudais
Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
Michael O'Brien
James Goff
Debra Swanson
President
Vice President
Treasurer
Frederick Azar
Jacquleen Dano
David Islam
Honor Board Andrew Wong, Scott Beatse,
Lilly Palmon, James Marshall
Secretary Lori Pallai
76
The Year In Review
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop mails a brochure, "Understanding AIDS," to 107 million U.S. households.
USS Vincennes shoots down Iranian commercial airliner killing 290.
Jimmy Swaggert confesses to frequenting a local hotel to visit a prostitute.
Space Shuttle Discovery returns the United States to space.
Federal law bans smoking on all U.S. flights of two hours or less.
Ben Johnson sets a new world record in the 100 meter dash, winning Olympic gold, and then loses all for using
steroids.
JAMA reports Retin-A prescription cream effective in reducing facial wrinkles.
George Bush accepts Republican nomination in New Orleans, then wins the 1988 presidential election.
Superman turns fifty years old, and Irving Berlin reaches his centennial year.
Deaths: "Pistol Pete" Maravich (40), Divine (42), Roy Orbison (52), John Houseman (86), Andy Gibb (30), Billy
Carter (51), Louis L'Amour (80), Christine Onassis (37).
The Typical Senior Medical Student
Condition: Partially differentiated Sen-ioritis
wild mild atypia ^* Chief Complaint: "1 lost 3,000 'frequent flyer
miles' due to computer er-
*> ror"
Signs & Symptoms: Apathy, depleted bank ac-count,
padded CV, recent
tan lines, illusions of gran-deur,
hypersomnolence,
FLEX-o-phobia, residency
echolalia
i Diagnostic Tests: Skin Bx to R/O SCCA, se-rum
ETOH level, LFT's
B]> Rorschach Response: "1 see a loan interest rate
compounding quarterly"
1 Treatment: Dramamine, residency of
choice
| Prognosis: Temporary euphoria with
relapse imminent •
At A Cocktail Party
"You're a medical student ... my
doctor prescribed Lopressor, what
do you think?"
"Don't ask me
thopedics."
I'm going into Or-
"I don't think it goes with pizza and
beer."
T-» ^«Hf
HP//} s—wi
jJl'i
[]Ja
ur v i 13
"Is your doctor aftiliated with any resi-dency
programs?"
"Sorry, I'm only up to OB/GYN in my
FLEX review books."
77
Clockwise at Top: Dr. Ray and Noel
stop for "lunch" at the school
cafeteria. Chris helps out in Jamaica
by weighing some of the children in
his area. Joey and John analyze a
chest film during their Senior
Radiology Elective at TMC. Sean
searches for any Senior notes but,
alas, finds none (it's January).
Considering Chris' expertise . . .
Keith and Anne allow him to weigh
their luggage.
78
Clockwise at Top: Susan & Jim
spend a cold senior elective in
Alaska. Dan dresses up for afternoon
clinics. Tyler gets closer to the sun
catching rays at a rooftop spa. Kevin
& Richard Intently watch the board
as Dr. Cohen draws up yet another 2
X 2 table. With weekends now free,
Lauren enjoys watching a class
tennis match. Center: Britt, Leslie,
Anne, & Kelvin each have their own
residency "wish list" for Santa.
79
Clockwise: Even the Big Free rolled
out the red carpet for the
conventioneers this past summer.
Studying in London, these four
seniors try to disguise their identities
(Dave, Jill, Steve, and Angelique).
Personifying how many of us felt,
Freddy gets "overwhelmed" by the
whole application process. With the
stress of Senior year too much to
bear, Brian and Rob sulk in the
cafeteria. After a long absence from
New Orleans, Brian prepares to open
his mailbox.
|l|i|M' -
ilfliiiH 1 ^\
Clockwise: "... Julio down by the school yard." Leslie &
John proudly display their "one-patient" medicine file. Kevin
doesn't seem to mind not having to wear that heavy white
coat for awhile. With time to spare, Juliet & her dog explore
the Mississippi River Basin. Like a few others in our class, Vic
& Linda tied the knot during Senior year. Center: After the
storm, Shaun & Laeton "tough-it-out" in St. Thomas.
The Athlete In Us All . . .
Okay Guys, Who Forgot the Volleyball
Net?
Dr. Garry Watches With Envy as Darin
Accepts the Award as Intramural Ten-nis
Champion in the Middle of His Viro-logy
Lecture
Steve Laments, "C'mon Guys Let Me
Play Too!"
Diana Struts Her Stuff in the 1986
Crescent City Classic
Pat Swings for the West Bank!
82
Brad Goes for the Gold!
Steve Demonstrates the "California
Walk"
Volleyball Competitors Pose for a
Post-Game Portrait
Tuesday Night Hoop Action!
Bill Prays for Rain as His Team is Down
by 10 Runs
Is There A Doctor In The House?
The Honeymoon's Over Todd!
Dawn Gets Her Oral Fix
Jim Bothers a Drug Rep One Too Many
Times
After the Jamaican Experience They
Were Never the Same Again
84
Dana Learns How to
Heads"
'Suck Them
Chris Auditions for the "Roman Meal"
Ticket
Cindy's Ears Perk Up When Someone
Mentions "Party"
Suds and Tessie Boogy the Night
Away
Wendy Earns Extra Money Blowing Up
Lucky Dog Stands
85
Some That Were,
Some That Are,
Some That Will Be
Mark and Trudi
Sheryl and Joey
Al and Carrie
Bill and Lisa
»a V V
'
46
4
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L x
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i
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A
."•v * l
IB' *"
JmJ
Can You Find
Francois?
Victor and Linda
Patty and John
Ricky and Lilly
88
What Is He
Looking At?
89
Two's
"mmw&m:vm:»:sm
Company
The Future Class of 1989
>*>*.: #<i
i l_ ".V *-'
A) Fariba Navid 2) Steve Favrot C) Pat Rhoades D) Marianne Madiedo E) Chris Dellasantina F) Ron Rinker
92
lave Kostick B) Mimi Yenari C) Mike O'Brien D) Curtis Holder E) Wendy Warwar F) Robert Warwar G) Paul Mangiafico H) Jill Broffman
93
When I Grow Up
m Going To Be
A Doctor . . .
i
A) Christine Hamori B) Terry Texada C) Rob Treuting D) Carrie Vigilante E) Kevin Ward F) Gina Payton
94
/anessa Tatum B) Ellen Gandle C) Laeton Pang D) Al Barron E) Isaac Yoon F) Jon Katz G) Peter Lindy H) John Maxwell I) Wendy Male J)
Roland
95
MD's To Be
A) Bill Johnson B) Anne Sholes C) Steve Jones D) Ken Zuckerman E) James McPherson
96
\) Kim Ely B) Anne Tommey C) Sarah Willard D) Wes Ely E) Juliet La Mers F) Darin Portnoy G) Gerry Livaudais H) Theresa Pryor
97
From These Humble Beginnings . .
.
A) Francois Picot B) Dawn George C) Gordon Cohen D) Todd Mimeses E) Freddy Azar F) Greg Pearsall G) Trudi McGrath H) Steve Harris
98
. . . To Becoming A Physician
A) Lilly Palmon B) Rickey Palmon C) Kristin Alline D) Dave Liggett E) Robert Eubanks F) Scott Beatse G) Kelvin Raybon H) Joe Koclanes
99
tCHOoii of
QRilDTJATIXTO
Dianna E. Abney
Shreveport, Louisiana
Deborah A. Allen
Cleveland, Tennessee
Kristin M. Alline
Slidell, Louisiana
Angelique E. Almoian
Villa Park, California
Elizabeth R. Armstrong
Galveston, Texas
Frederick M. Azar
Greenville, Mississippi
100
UNIVERSITY
MEDK3IME!
Q^ail.88 OF
lis A. Barron
ugar Land, Texas
Bradley J. Bartholomew Holly M. Bastian
River Ridge, Louisiana Boutte, Louisiana
Scott N. Beatse
West Covina, California
lean M. Blaydon
It. Croix, Virgin Islands
Joseph M. Boucree
New Orleans, Louisiana
101
Brian J. Carey
Seattle, Washington
Steven Chen
Irvine, California
Noel M. Chia
Metairie, Louisiana
Gordon A. Cohen Christopher P.
Newport Beach, California Dellasantina
Oakland, California
Britton M. Devillier
Deridder, Louisiana
102
ebra J. Devoe
Dronado, California
Susan J. Diem
New Orleans, Louisiana
William D. Donovan
Pelham, New York
Elizabeth A. Dopson
West Monroe, Louisiana
oshua L. Dowling
lew Orleans, Louisiana
James N. Dunlap
New Orleans, Louisiana
Dana C. Edwards Susan R. Ehrenthal
New Orleans, Louisiana New York, New York
Eugene W. Ely
Shreveport, Louisiana
Kim A. Ely
Chatham, New Jersey
103
w-
Robert L. Eubanks Jr.
New Orleans, Louisiana
Stephen R. Favrot
New Orleans, Louisiana
Victor Ferraris
Bethesda, Maryland
Ellen L. Gandle
New Orleans, Louisiana
Jerry B. Gee II
Thibodaux, Louisiana
Albert J. Folgueras
Ellicott City, Maryland
Thomas W. Frank
New Orleans, Louisiana
Dawn M. George Vincent J. Giuseffi III
Panama City Beach, Florida New Orleans, Louisiana
104
mes M. Goff Jr. Suzanne M. Grondin
1>rth Bethesda, Maryland Fryeburg, Maine
Daniel E. Gurr
Littleton, Colorado
Christine A. Hamori
New Orleans, Louisiana
Seven E. Harris
altimore, Maryland
Sudarshan Hebbar
Topeka, Kansas
Anna I. Heisser
New Orleans, Louisiana
John N. Henrie
Salt Lake City, Utah
urtis H. Holder
Drtland, Oregon
105
Karen T. Kahn
Ventura, California
Diana L. Karg
De Rancho Palos Verdes
California
Jonathan Kiev
Saddle River, New Jersey
Suzette S. Killeen
New Orleans, Louisiana
Daniel H. Kim
New Orleans, Louisiana
Myra A. Kleinpeter
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
106
eorge P. Koclanes
iglewood, Colorado
Keith A. Kolber Michael S. Kook
Briarcliff Manor, New York Metairie, Louisiana
David A. Kostick
Rock Rapids, Iowa
avid J. Kraus
andusky, Ohio
Steven M. Krems
Beverly Hills, California
I
'avid S. Kushner
tellandale, Florida
Juliet La Mers
Oxnard, California
L
107
Keith A. Lepak
Oklahoma, Oklahoma
Peter B. Lindy
Memphis, Tennessee
Gerard F. Livaudais
Fairfax Station, Virginia
Lisa R. Lowry
Harahan, Louisiana
Tyler S. Lucas
New York, New York
Sharon K. Lunsford
Arcadia, Louisiana
108
Marianne Madiedo
Coral Gables, Florida
Lisa M. Main
Brandon, Mississippi
Wendy S. Male Paul G. Mangiafico
Lunenburg, Massachusetts Danbury, Connecticut
I James D. Marshall
I Peoria, Illinois
Barbara A. Martin
New Orleans, Louisiana
Maria T. Martinez
Deland, Florida
Ronald C. Marts
Cutoff, Louisiana
109
Daniel Masluk
San Dimas, California
Anthony J. Masone
New York, New York
John E. Maxwell II
Ruston, Louisiana
Trudi K. McGrath
Groton, Connecticut
Shaun L. Mclntire James G. McPherson
New Orleans, Louisiana Roosevelt, New York
Patricia M. Mengoni
Chicago, Illinois
Cynthia K. Moore
Moraga, California
110
>hn H. Moore
olumbia, South Carolina
John S. Morrow
New Orleans, Louisiana
arbara J. Mroz
ew Orleans, Louisiana
Todd I. Muneses
Baltimore, Maryland
Kevin S. Myers
Metairie, Louisiana
Fariba Navid
McLean, Viriginia
in
Florentine* E. Palmon
Washington, DC
Lillian F. Palmon
Colorado Springs,
Colorado
Laeton J. Pang
Kaneohe, Hawaii
HHHH
Leslie H. Parrott
Knoxville, Tennessee
Francois J. Picot
New York City, New York
Anthony G. Pietroniro
Miami Beach, Florida
112
Patrick N. Rhoades
Norwalk, California
Darin A. Portnoy Theresa M. Pryor
Morgantown, West Virginia Mobile, Alabama
Ronald D. Rinker
Easton, Pennsylvania
113
Julio E. Rios
New Orleans, Louisiana
Lisa I. Robbins
Potomac, Maryland
Miguel H. Rodriquez
Kenner, Louisiana
Phillip Y. Roland
Huntsville, Alabama
Margot L. Roseman
Studio City, California
Scott G. Shields
Phoenix, Arizona
114
Anne H. Sholes
Littleton, Colorado
Steven V. Snyder
Benicia, California
Richard H. Steele
New Orleans, Louisiana
anessa L. Tatum Howard T. Tee
Ipper Marlboro, Maryland Potomac, Maryland
115
Charles T. Texada
Alexandria, Louisiana
Jeannette T. Thai
San Jose, California
Rama T. Thiruvengadam Annmarie Tommey
Ellicott City, Maryland La Jolla, California
Robert J. Treuting
Metairie, Louisiana
Grace C. Vigilante
New York, New York
116
Kent D. Walker
New Orleans, Louisiana
Kevin S. Wall
Eden Prairie, Minnesota
Kevin R. Ward
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Robert J. Warwar
New Orleans, Louisiana
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Wendy
Seattle,
Jo Warwar
Washington
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Sarah C. Willard
New Orleans, Louisiana
Albert J. Folgueras
Ellicott City, Maryland
Carey E. Winder
Shreveport, Louisiana
117
Deborah A. Wing
Anaheim, California
Andrew M. Wong
San Francisco, California
Brian Y. Yee
Honolulu, Hawaii
Midori A. Yenari
Gretna, Louisiana
118
aac S. Yoon
otomac, Maryland
Ingrid E. Zimmer-Galler
Niceville, Florida
Kenneth P. Zuckerman
Silver Spring, Maryland
George Michael Chun
Huntington Beach, California
119
Class Of 1989
Theresa Pryor, God will be at your
side as you work to relieve the suffer-ing
of your fellow man. Your loving
family.
Congratulations Myra, we love you.
The Kleinpeters: Mom, Dad, Milton,
Jr., Milowe.
Loving congratulations, Rodney A
second generation Tulane M.D.!
Dad, Mom, Helen, Carl, Bob, Momo!
With great pride, joy, and admiration
we congratulate you, Dr. Maria T.
Martinez. You have fulfilled your
dreams & of those who love you.
Mom, Tats, Bill, Meg, Lisa, & Mel.
Jon, we love you and are proud of
you. Mom, Dad, & Marshall.
Congratulations Scott Beatse! A
great achievement be a great son!
Love, Mom, Dad, & Family.
Only our love is greater than our
pride in you. Congratulations, Dr.
Steven Krems Love, Mom & Stacy
Dr. Karen Tresser Kahn, The
Tresser family salutes you with great
pride. Mom and Dad, Alan, Irene,
Ben, and Bear.
Success is getting what you want.
Happiness is wanting what you get.
Congratulations, Bob Rende!
Congratulations Dr. Brit. We're
proud of you. Tracy, Mom, Dad,
Guy.
Congratulations & best wishes Bri-an,
we are proud of you! Love, Mom,
Dad, Aileen, & Popo Yee.
Debs - We are so very proud of you.
Love, Dad, Mom, Al, Lam.
Congratulations Rama! We love you
Dr. Peeper! - Mom, Dad, Raj, and
Selvy.
Congratulations Chris! We are so
proud of you Love, Dad, Mom, Char-ley,
Peter.
We are proud of
Love, Dad & Ann.
you, Barbara.
Congratulations Dr. Wendy Male
May you "enjoy life and the practice
of the art" of medicine! Love, Mom,
Dad, Randy, Laurie, and your grand-parents.
Congratulations Angela & Dan!
Keep grinding; you're destined for
great attainments! Masluks.
Congratulations Dr. Madiedo We
are very proud of you All our love
and good luck May God bless you.
Mother, Dad, Ray, Guillermo, Bi-biana,
& Family.
Congrats Dr. Ted Wulfekuhler
Love, Mom, Mar, Sar, BR, Joni,
Gram, and the two Dr. Wulfekuhlers.
Petre: I feel very happy with your
success. Congratulations. Best Wish-es,
Mama.
Congratulations Dr. Ron Rinker.
Your family is so proud of you Love,
Mom, Dad, Mike & Linda.
Congratulations, Jeannette Thu Congratulations Kelvin Raybon
Van Thai. You made us proud & We are proud of you. Mom, Dad, &
happy. Love, your parents & sisters. Kerry
Ron — You finally made your dream
come true. Nan & Pap Newhart and
Nan & Pap Rinker.
We are proud of you Christine!
Mom, Dad, Omi & Isabelle Hamori
Thanks for everything Mom and
Dad. Love, Freddy.
Dr. Kevin R. Ward - The family
proudly applauds your achievement.
You're terrific! PS 118:24.
Well done, Mike O'Brien! With
love & joy, Mom, Dad, & Todd.
Phil, Congratulations and best wish-es
for continued success in the fu-ture.
Congratulations David Mom, Dad
& all the clan.
Thank God for you, James. Love,
Mom, Dad, Roz, Jeanne.
Congratulations, Jim! What an
achievement! We're so proud. Dr. &
Mrs. James Dunlap & family.
Dr. Laeton Pang, Congratulations!
To God be the Glory. Love, Mom,
Dad, Bryan, Randy, Grandma,
Grandpa, Po Po, and Kungkung.
Darin, The future: as happy! Love,
Mom.
Isaac Yoon! You achieved Mom's
wish; promise is fulfilled. Papa.
Congratulations Vanessa on be-coming
an M.D. Love from your
proud parents and brother Jimmy.
Congratulations Noel, we are proud
of you. Mom, Dad, God-parents, Edi-son,
Linda.
120
We Salute You:
Way to go! All right - Shawn & Ke-vin
We love - Mom, Maria & Stuart
Congratulations Pat for a childhood
dream fulfilled. We are proud of you.
Mom & Dad.
Doc. Barron, sounds real good!
Keep looking up! We congratulate &
love you. Mom, Dad, & Cherie.
Congratulations Gordon Cohen
Our love, pride, and respect. Stan,
Rae, Sharon, Gary, Sid, Ruth.
Congratulations Robby Love, Mom,
Dad, Stephen, & Michael.
Dr. Ann Marie Tommey, with all
our love and pride. Your family.
Dearest Dr. Jill Broffman, we sa-lute
you loudly & love you proudly!
All the happy Broffmans.
Congratulations, Freddy Azar, we
love you, are very proud of you, and
thank God for blessing us with you.
Mom, Dad, Joe, Vicki, Steve, & Eve-lyn.
Tres bon, Sweet Dady (WCJ)! Love,
Mom, Dad, and the girls.
Congratulations and success Kim
and Wes. Love, Mom, Dad, & Greg.
Good Luck, John Love, Mom, Dad,
Jen.
"Tracy - Thank you for your sup-port
and patience! Love Always,
Vince".
Congratulations Dr. Eubanks! We
share your pride and wish you God's
richest blessings! We love you, Mom,
Dad, Holly.
Kristin Alline, congratulations &
best of luck. Love, Mom, Mike &
Darren.
Doctor Cindy Cay Moore-our fa-vorite
daughter-a dream come true.
All our love, Mom & Dad.
Congratulations Terry Texada-
4th generation Tulane M.D. Our
Love always, Mom & Dad.
Peter, We are so proud of our 4/
4Doc.
Yea "Stevie Wonder"! Hugs and
love, Mom & Dad David, Clifford &
Margaret.
Wulfekuhler? No, that's Wine-cooler
W...I...N...E...
Francois, One journey is ending &
another beginning. Wherever the
road leads, our pride in you & love
for you will keep you company for
each step along the way. Good luck &
God bless you. Mother & Father.
Congratulations Dr. Darin Port-noy.
We are so proud of you. Dad,
Karen, El, Grandma & Pop Pop.
Lots of luck Steve. From Dad, Pau-la,
Arnie, Lindsay, & JP.
Proud that your aspiration has be-come
a reality! MUCH SUCCESS!
The Koclanes Family.
A dream fulfilled, Dr. Miguel! Con-gratulations
and Love! Your Parents
& Brothers.
M, D, & T - thanks for your support.
Mark, 5000 miles apart & always
there for me. I love you, Trudi.
Congratulations, we're very proud of
you Gerard. Dad, Mother, & Ste-vey.
Congratulations to our son Ken May
today's dream become tomorrow's
reality. Love, Mom & Dad.
Dr. Andrew Wetstone - Congratu-lations
and every good wish for your
future success as a physician. Love,
Dad, Grandpa, Ken, Terri, & Brad.
Congratulations, Much Love & Best
wishes Kent. We are very proud -
Mom, Dad, Greg, Patti, Bob, Caitie,
and Corey.
Thank you Class of 1989. From
Leslie at Crown Travel.
Congratulations Todd & Kim! We
are very proud of both of you! All our
Love, The Muneses Family.
Congratulations Sue Ehrenthal!
You made us proud and happy. Love,
your parents and brothers.
Curtis Holder, we love you and we
are proud of you. Mom and Dad.
Congratulations, Jim Marshall
Love, Mom & Dad.
The T-Wave '89 staff would like to
thank all those who have helped to
make this Yearbook possible.
Congratulations & Good Luck to all
members of the Class of 1989.
From, The Yearbook Staff.
Thanks to those who stayed fun BD-You
made it worthwhile-LM
Thanks Lauren, Love Kristin.
121
r
In Memoriam
Robert L. Allen, MD
Feb. 13, 1930 - July 20, 1986
Tulane Medical School
Class Of 1955
Internal Medicine And
Nuclear Medicine
ADMINISTRATIVE &
DEPARTMENTAL SPONSORS
The Yearbook Staff and the Class of 1989 acknowledge and appreciate
the continued support of the following:
Office of the Chancellor
Office of the Dean
Office of Admissions
Office of Student Affairs
Office of Student Services and Med Rep
Department of Anatomy
Department of Anesthesiology
Department of Biochemistry
Department of Dermatology
Department of Medicine
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Department of Ophthalmology
Department of Orthopedic Surgery
Department of Pathology
Department of Pediatrics
Department of Pharmacology
Department of Physiology
Department of Radiology
Department of Surgery
J
123
r
Congratulations
To The
School of Medicine
Class of 1989
From The Staff And Administration of
Tulane University Hospital And
Tulane University Medical Group
Tulane UNIVERSITY
MEDICAL CENTER
124
Tulane
Medical Alumni Association
Best Wishes to the
n
Class of 1989!
We Serve.,. The Student
The Alumni, and
The Medical Center
Through... Alumni News Publications
The Annual Crawfish Boil
Homecoming Activities
Class Reunions
Nationwide Alumni Functions
Student Recognition Awards
The Senior "Match" Tarty, and
The Alumni Locating Service
ii
125
rCONGRATULATIONS GRADS
Children's Hospital congratulates the graduates of the Class of 1989 of
the Tulane University School of Medicine.
Many of you have completed clinical rotations at Children's Hospital in pediatrics,
pediatric subspecialties, pediatric rehabilitative medicine, pediatric orthopaedics,
pediatric surgery, pediatric surgical subspecialties, pediatric radiology and in a
host of other areas. We have been delighted to have you be a part of Children's
Hospital and to see how a union of the Children's Hospital with the private
practicing community and its affiliate institutions, Tulane University and Louisiana
State University, has made us a most dynamic and growing force in pediatric
care in the State of Louisiana and the entire Gulf Coast area. We look forward
to continued growth, and we are certain that many of you will be a part of
that growth.
As your residencies and fellowships progress we hope that many of them
will be done in part here and that we will have the opportunity to watch you
grow professionally. We hope that you will be frequent visitors and learn of
the resource of our Children's Hospital in the New Orleans and Louisiana
community.
Congratulations for much happiness and fulfillment in the future.
L^
CHILDREN'S
HOSPITAL
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r
Rx -For What Ale's You
JOE'S BAR
1500 Cleveland Ave.
New Orleans, LA
581-9809
Mike Serio's
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#1 1515 Tulane Avenue
(Across from Charity)
522-8686 ;****
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(Next to Joe's Bar)
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Tulane
Medical Bookstore
Congratulations To The
Class Of 1989!
TULANE MEDICAL CENTER
HOSPITAL AUXILIARY
Congratulates The
Class Of 1989
128
MATCH DAY MEMO'S
Name Specialty Location
1
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