Scientific meetings and clinical trips have been taking our Faculty about the country extensively. William C. McCarty Jr., Assistant Professor of Radiology, attended the meetings of the Radiological Society of North America in San Francisco. Radford C. Tanzer, Assistant Professor of Surgery, was elected to membership in the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Survey at the annual meeting held at White Sulphur Springs. LeslieK. Sycamore, Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Radiology, president of Blue Shield and a director of Blue Cross for New Hampshire and Vermont, attended the national joint meetings of the two commissions at French Lick Springs. Richard H. Barrett, Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, represented New Hampshire at the annual meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists at St. Louis.
Jarrett H. Folley, Instructor in Medicine, was registered in the American College of Physicians Course in Gastroenterology at Philadelphia under Professor Henry L. Bockus of the Graduate School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania. HanfordL. Auten, Instructor in Ophthalmology, attended the Boston meeting of the New England Ophthalmological Society. John B. McKenna, Assistant Professor of Neuroanatomy and Psychiatry, Henry L. Heyl, Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery, and Ralph W. Hunter, Assistant Professor of Neuroanatomy and Neurology, attended the New York meeting of the Association for Research in Nervous and Mental Diseases.
John P. Bowler, Professor of Surgery, Arthur E. McNeill, Research Associate in the Physiological Sciences, and William L. McLaughlin, Instructor in Surgery, attended the annual meeting of the New England Urological Society in Boston. Charles W. Lobitz Jr., Instructor in Dermatology and Syphilology, attended the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology and Syphilology in Chicago where he received honorable mention for his research demonstration "The Chemistry of Palman Sweat."
Walter B. Crandell, Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery, and Chief of Surgery at the White River Veterans Hospital, presented "Surgical Therapy in Jaundice" at the 13th annual convention of the National Gastroenterological Association held at the Hotel Pennsylvania in New York.
1926—Horace Bolton Loder, practicing on his native health at Bridgeton, N. J., has a stepson Frank Van Devanter Cortelyou, a senior in the pre-medical course at Princeton. Horace, one of the three Phi Betes in the class, after graduation from Johns Hopkins, returned to his second love, the Green Mountain State, and interned at the Mary Fletcher Hospital in Burlington in preparation for general practice in Brandon. When the Great Depression swept over Vermont it carried him back home where he joined the Pediatric Service of the Bridgeton Hospital. This made him a "specialist in contagious diseases" to Uncle Sam when the War came, so contrarily he was assigned to straight and intensive Internal Medicine for four years, which he has been doing ever since. Bridgeton, only 38 miles south of Philadelphia and 50 miles west of Atlantic City, is Cumberland County seat on Cohansey Creek and on a good tall day in sight of Delaware Bay. Spring comes early to South Jersey. When March begins to pall give Horace a call.