(H. 1. (tt. f . Al«mnt 30«r«al 



Published Monthly by the Alumni Association 

 OF THE New York College of Pharmacy, Columbia University 



JEANNOT HOSTMANN, Editor 



CONTRIBUTING EDITORS 

 M. M. RUSBV GS. C. D I E K fVI A IM M. V, A R IM Y 



Address all communications to the C. U. C. P. Alumni Journal, 115-119 West 68th Street, New York. 



Subscription Rates: $1.00 per Year.— Single Copy 20 cents. 



Vol. XXIII. 



JUNE 1916. 



Number 6. 



Zl 



It 1>I Tr€>I^I^25^X_^ 



¥ 



T HE ALUMNI ASSOCIATIO N. 



Once again we wish to appeal to the 

 recent graduates to become members 

 of the Alumni Association. Twenty-six 

 members of the graduating class were 

 elected to membership at the May meet- 

 ing. Our treasurer, Dr. Leslie, sent a 

 personal letter to every other member of 

 the class and this resulted in the receipt 

 of twenty-one applications, which were 

 acted upon at the June meeting This 

 makes a total of forty-seven members 

 elected. We hope that there are many 

 of the one hundred and thirty-four mem- 

 bers of the Class of 1916 who have de- 

 cided to join the Association and who 

 have simply put off sending in their ap- 

 plications. To these we would say, "do 

 it now." We feel that the self-evident 

 reasons for becoming active members of 

 the Alumni Association have been ex- 

 plained to them so often that repetition 

 is needless. The Alumni Association 



needs them, they need the Alumni Associ- 

 ation; they must become regular readers 

 of the Journal so as to keep in touch 

 with college activities. Therefore, in the 

 words of our genial secretary, "Become 

 a Cog — Mesh In." 



ST RINGENCY OR CONSE R- 

 VATION . 



On page 137 we publish some regula- 

 tions established for its members by the 

 Munich Medical Society. They are rather 

 interesting. Whether these regulations 

 were put in force owing to an actual 

 shortage of medicinal agents or whether 

 simply in connection with the well known 

 policy of conservation and efficiency fol- 

 lowed by the Germans we are unable to 

 say. They furnish another striking ex- 

 ample of the far-reaching effects of the 

 terrible conflict. 



