va ,rm '1 pp .:-ia AM3i ,W7?WB flft& ffM 'Vf-''Wi liVA'i, fl Wi ' SWO" V.M'VWH 'W V,v", MIV f" 2 t '-JS'V" s?i , ( V i XV , ' ,.&i 33 1 'j SB EVENING PUBLIC LED0ERr-.PHILADELPHIA; WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1922 m PtfAW student, ijck-ef-jll-trjdes, overcoming 5 -" j all obstacles in fight te win his m. d. degree Rekert B Cadman Has Sold Bleed and Cleaned Streets te Get an Education ..M- versatility often CAME TO HIS RESCUE ' "- n Spent Summer Vacations in Soft-Ceal Mines and Sailed Sea in Cattle Beats llWAN students have weed their way through the University of Penn 11" svlvenia. But it is extremely doubtful if any ene has had a mere remarkable leareer than Rebert D. Cadman, a senior in the Medical Scheel. He has Bought every inch of the way for seven yeans. Everything that a college man can de te earn money he has done. He Ilis suffered and sacrificed cheerfully for the sake of a college education. He has even sold his own life's bleed te pay hta expenses. Six tlme3 since school started this year he has given his bleed for ensfusien operations. Without sentiment or sentimentality, he gees te he medical laboratories and takes his bleed count If he finds a sufficient Lumber of red corpuscles he agrees te submit te the operation. Other- riie he waits until the number comes up te par. In a case of emergency, he gave his bleed twice within two weeks. his is all the mere remarkable when it is considered that last winter he suffered a breakdown and was in the University Hospital -for mere than i month with pneumonia. "I guess I have tried about overy- ing there is in the way of odd obi," Cadman exclaimed without the ightcst trace of boasting. "I erked three summers in a soft-coal ine. That was a dirty job, all ight "During the fall of 1914 I had it ugh. I walked the streets et Wladelphia for two whole weeks oeking for work and there was none 9 be had. Finally I landed seme- ing. I don't recall just what it as, but it saved the day. Other- se I would have had te give up y college course. "Generally speaking, though, I nve discovered that a fellow can ways find something te de if he ants it badly enough. If you are lungry and you don't knew where our next meal is coming from, you Ml hustle around. When you get eel hungry, you will take most any thing. "I have gene into restaurants Eiany a time and offered te wash lahes or scrub the fleer for a meal ad they have never refused me. iTyf. &M ..'., -: ;,-' iryf. 'JK? ?,V j,i : MlU ';-'Vyw-ru 4 1 itlT OTMMBfiiii i 'if J k. yvwi'r'ptfJjBPg kk M. '.iTjAu Vi 1 . VtMlVL'k'f. i WWiiXzi'M .WrSHVW': Fi-i'r;?v ts t -: n 'A mm !&&&& mmmm- ' !' .'" a .'j U.''tJ& m msm Rebert B. Cadman, senior of medical school, University of Pennsylvania, in one of his studious moods in his room m v?J: m 7ti'i- m ". ... dl . S i ;... WJWMZrf'irWW'X :" wi-', U.?.' e- t,z ih& irt mcrubbed Cafe Floers and Cleaned Streets "At one time I couldn't find any- ;hing else te de se I denned overalls nd cleaned streets here in Phila delphia. There's nothing like va-rlety. "I was a bouncer in a Negro res- Uurant for a while. That was en- ertaining. Then I turned te writ- ng. I was campus reporter for sev- leral newspapers. I wrete some fic- len and actually sold it. I'm afraid t wasn't very high-class literature. But these stories were thrillers. "Heaven only knows hew many fens of coal I have shoveled into ellars and hew many tens of ashes have shoveled out of furnaces that have tended since I entered cel-ege. "Fer a time I had a job as an as- iatant pharmacist in a drug store W the strensrth of the chemistry I (bad taken in college. This is the way I have fitrured it t: If you don't knew all about a thing when you apply for a job, you'll SOOIl learn thn vp. f vnii have any bruins nr nhitifu f nil "One cummer I went out West nl worked in the Dakota wheat fields. I had a chance te get seme 'nd in Mentana for fifty cents an We and for a while I thought I would give up medicine and settle oewn as a farmer. But I seen ave UP that idea. made Several Trips Abroad en Cattle Beats I have had mv nhnra f 0mii oe--maps, aluminum ware , books nd brushes. 0 go back tO mv ilnvs In Mn4li. ttmberland-I clerked in u grocery ere and sold newspapers for a long I We. "I worked tw , .. 1 j,L 0n R cattlebeat three or diflferent times. I earned my age te south America one sum r and MnH in . u Wrt Wasn't n vant ,-.... J- A " wm, however, se we tried rent- Stf i 1 M i& :&& Is -Ki A tV !. m !l 'tt ,,r ".' w ' &&' i mediately I'cnn ! bcttled. He would go te Arrived at University With Capital of $44 Se as a boy of oevcntepn Cedmnn appeared nt the office of admissions of the University in the fall of 1013. There be met his first una. His cn cn trnnre requirements were net altogether satisfactory. He lacked one unit In mathematics. Only four days remained "They just happened te ask me the questions I had studied." This rranrk was characteristic. He speaks of oil his experiences In an abselulely impersonal manner. He matriculated In the college de partment of the University. After ar ranging his roster with all the wow they would permit him te carry, he went around te individual professors and asked them if he might attend their lectures. Tbey hesitated at first, mmEm i sriX .'.." KV?15.. . '?V"I'' H'-iWfJ ; xk, m?M!ix&. 3R& ?Av M-' ':,! .. H r-lr.v jiwr ; . .?. yX" ; ' kW :ts mm mi m ?? w? mSt .m'H.w " & w.? '--; :&&.: wt ' .1i-V.'J?fi :.; 13 Mi m W,(WLT -. R.Vl."1JIJi. !.?! rw-it. v fv.v, v xm fi . jiMW all ' ) n ,.')V'''''V v; i v- " H WBWfmt 1 '",'. .'.!?. V K '.'i-.V $&.?;i Yri, i'r-?: i if h , &M ! afew- ft -.t r&& 58sV :3 VV.i .-m jr' '.W'lr kil .V.VA m- Km 51 vs-f r rt .rtA ,i.f i i :. . . t-i . 't K1 .fe1" Ki i"A'" w;w tOJ Ifr: ?K ) Mvv. vv a: ' si f,'-1 - OV f.5 ,!? si. y ! ' 4t'Mf Tl ' . '. J'"V .t, N?-', UMtffi &;?.,; s " r, " s fc : . .S :', W ;-"! t, :a w i&fc m r-it !:,? ss.-:. 'rC Ps.-',?0' : r . . ' i CaMmw; rvSKC'7 S?s ura- r'," : u S' ;' -;'?.: W '& S fA fvls:Vf:Wir-HM ,''!;'vft,' tj' i : ;' . .,!' ii piKEr :?. W".',i y Sl'W! ; -N"' 'V 4V ( 4 i.,i'.f ?i'v i iiv';-w. ,. .' iiii !.t: M !j..v: X4 ,&:'. ', "1iV. ? i 'f?l!')I IW: Mti ;CiTK7..' ",UJ.tV': .W' PlSt, p '- 1 -ri' f'jv: !S $ ?ea Kh LA k WOiW1, "ft ';!?, ; 7 'IW'TSsS 4fe rjstfl tH 21 ;.jt; )- 0: '" f' '. i "" 5 A 4 'KV "' .laxy: EI3 .! ' ftV --.vt.li!a 'V'ivivy? f" "frrir -.sif'.; i'XfJ&S -WV T v'.', ; li-mrL -J ' iK'i ? - 2l; ', bad te scour around and find something te ue. But that did net prevent him from taking part in nthletlen. He had Played football a little In high school. When he cntPred Penn he went out with the (quad and in his second and third j cars played en the second team. Wrestled, Boxed, Swam and Taught Beys' Class He also wrestled, boxed and bwnre. Am he found time te take charge et a boys' class in a settlement beuse in Seuth Philadelphia. There he taught them manual training and various games. , I never missed a single Shakes pearean performance during my whole i freshman year," he said. "I used te go te me I'nilauelphla Orchestra regu larlyin fact. I still de." During the summer vacation follow ing his freshman year, he attended a T. M. C. A. conference at Eagles Mere, Pa. Mere than 800 college men from Kastern and Middle Atlantic States were there. The Ber. Jehn R. Hart, Jr., the Episcopal secretary of the Chrlstlnn AsKoeiiitien at the University, said the ether day: "Cadman steed out among nil these men at the conference. That was the first time he had come di rectly te our notice. He hhewed far mere insight, mure depth of thought and a greater intellectual curiosity than any of the ether biudents there." One of the meet nremlntnt mnnLm I of the cellese faculty remembered Cad- i man s uerk In his clnss sis years nge. "J have never known a mere remark able man en the campus a man who has had a richer, broader, and deeper experience in life a man who has done mere things for himself. His papers ; were absolutely Individual. Ue always niu wum ue tneugni regardless or the cost te himself." At the beginning of his fourth year Cadman left college, crossed the bor der and enlisted in the Canadian cav alry. That was in the fall of IMG wuen the outlook wai darkest. He rved with the Canadian forces until the Lnlted States entered the war. Then he was transferred te the American Aviation Cerps and trained at Kelly Held near .Sun Antonie, TeXL AildSF." trial fl'Kt his plane crashed 2000 feet te the ground. He was net seriously injured, altheuch his eyes were affected se that he had te give up Hying. Saw War Service as Flier and Artilleryman Frem aviation he was transferred te light artillery and shipped back te .,nc?J: , ,llc Rftw nctlve service until the armistice was signed I played guard en the Southeastern Dl- yisiuii cumuiurinyiiiii loettmll team On this team were a number of former Ml American playerc. He became wrestlini r1m,i.. i tUnP"i,.c?!ar rM w;',,le he was nt ikcii.y tviui iiirr ne tiveu te use tlie machines. That was amusing if net especially lucra tive. "Heb" Cadman Is the son of n preacher. His father was n Methodist missionary In the heart of Africa for mere than twenty years. Ills uncle, his father's half-brother, is H, Parke Cadmun, the celebrated Brooklyn preacher and lecturer. Cadman was born in a leg cabin en tee outskirts of a mining camp in Cen II 0,m r, "I tee euusina or a mining camp in Cen- LTw weuh tu,te. rw ? w -te. . " - . . v Vf Twe views of Renert Cadman at work gratifying hin life ambition te become a physician He attended high school nt Northum bcrland. At an early age be began. working as a brcuker-bey in the coal mines. During his summer vacations he actually went down into the mines and worked. Before he was twelve he decided te become a doctor. As he naively puts It, "I wanted te be a doctor because my father was a preacher I" lie could have had u scholarship in a small Methodist college, but he madt up niam'tyd be would go te a large I m . fli Iwl.W m-. iV. 1 Hi WJAVL stitufien. One day he asked a "drum mer" who happuned te be In North- UUlberlaud wherii h ni.nr..; Vi." A t2'tea.,Th5 'lreld him that n.'wJliH,riSe,t,r e' rennaylyenlej was In n-, PbUadalphla.,, .Thqutstien was lm- "2Jr ; i,'?.f: y.m .. . . tCEJ &T.i.t ssissm before the entrance examinations. Un daunted, be bought a trigonometry book and set about mastering it. He waded through it and get 100 In the eiaralna. tlen. "That 100 was Just luck." be declared with a smlle as .be .recalled it. RB3 1 Iinssrf new k n thf? nppreclatc.1 his earnest-it-1 whlrcw their objections. immN 11 Jl0' ?"fllU! ,,,!l nttHtlens S'ln.6 University he had exactly ,'lBtn,t een melted away and he Tramped Siuth America and Eu rope en Proceeds of Odd Jobs, ANY SORT $F WORK CAN BE MASTERED, IS HISDOCTRJNE Husky MedicalSen- ter Pursues Studies Se He Can id Children "Rebert Cadman has the finest mind of any man I have met en theticampus," asserts the Rcr. K. Guy Cutsball, Methodist secretary of the Christian Association. "He thinks irfi terras et principles. He also gees ln the de tails. There you have the perfect com bination. Chese His Vocation te Help WeakChildrcn "He has a most altruistic viewpoint. He told me ence why he chose medicine as a profession. He wants te help chil dren who are weak and frail te get nil there is out of life. That Ls the reason be Is going te specialize in pediatrics after be graduates from the medical school. "He is strongly nen-sectnrlan. but he believes firmly In applied Chris tianity," Dr. Cutshall added. "He hn- done wonderful work nt the settlement house. I cannot, for the life of me, ice hew he accomplishes se much." Cadman was one of the two student doctors who looked after the nches and pains of the kiddles at Camp Happy at Terresdnle last summer. The camp Is maintained for undernourished children by the Philadelphia Health Council and Tuberculosis Committee In conjunrtlen with the Department of Public Welfare. Cadman resembles in no way the pro verbial studious type. He is husky. He does net wear bone-rimmed spectacles with thick lenses. He Is net a pale face. His shoulders are bread and h walks with a military stride. His eyes are bright and his jaw firm. Determina tion, independence and endurance an tamped en his face. In spite of the fact that he attends school days ami works nights, he never becomes physically tired. "I have geno for seventeen day without regular deep, just snatching 0 .5!ou',0 hours here and there," hu Mid. "I de suffer from nervousness ami thut upsets my digestion. Then I cut out rating altogether. "It was because I went for a year with only one square meal a day that 1 had a breakdown last year. Dut I had a month', rest In the hospital ami new I fwl no strong as ever. "The two subjects which interested me most during my undergraduate days were Knglish literature and history. I started in early reading every thin; i could lay my handH en. M fmhnr encouraged me te start a library. Be I gathered books here nnd there wherever 1 happened te be and sent them home. I guess I took all the English courses that I could fit Inte mv roster. There is no one particular type of lit erature that I especially prefer. I read a geed many novels. Likes European Novelists Better Than American "European novelists appeal te ma mere than de the American. I nm especially fend of H. O. Wells. Geerge Meredith and Anatole France. Amer ican writers eS the present day worry altogether tee much about the form and utterly neglect the matter. TIu rent European novelists like Franca nnd Meredith show jeu something bc Mdc surfaces. Tbey penetrate deep nnd really portray character." On the table in Cadman's room there arc a variety of pipes. Alw a variety et books. elume,i en anatomy, pathol ogy, pediatrics -find kindred subjects, a novel in German and a magaslne in Spanish, ne Las at odd mementa picked up reading knowledge et crunch, German and Spanish. He learned Spanish when he spent a summer vacation in Seuth America selling typewriters. German he picked up In school and In Germany after the armlHtire. hen he wUB n high school he rigred up the first radio net that was owned n his neighborhood. That was long beiere radio became popular There were no concerts being broadcast In dasK-9 r iaj8JuBt b'rnlghtdetH and He faw a photograph In a newspaper of the airplane In which the Wright w?te inndc ,h.cil; lnl,lal Without plans pr denignH of any kind he made a small model of the airplane And It worked. His father nlwars en couraged him te make things. He spent hla time as eer.v normal American boy does in his workshop ' Before he was twelve years old ht started out te see the world. Il "" """K'.v nnjecirtl. Out IB fatli came te Ids rescue. "If he can't tal care of himself he wnn'i . .. ," rnd If he can he will be all "right." father dee l.inil. . er take He with $1 17 In hla pocket he net out ;. see his native State. That only kin led h H aunet In for inn-.. ... "V.1 ,-rite poetry. Here is n poem Lhe !lm.e J" entered Penn as a freahin,f, f1Ui?L"Aed i,n '". Bhymer, 1 h;' ''! bwn te England, Spain Snd of Pennsylvania Verne" for I Italv. ' " unu wr..a,tA.l A. the Seventy-ninth DiviHin,, i.- v Cadman also found time new ami d!M hts nppetlte for mere travel that was neon ei tcnnsyivanla Vr. - 1020. It was edited by Dr. Cernel us JNegandt, professor of English at the University : . Eve, the Eternal An car rin. An old wemin t rhurch In vrnwr i,0,Wawthhr!l Mm" b,u'h Klii1se. iaaitnn gilrrlns. ' Hrductlve. A mplr of the Whltn Ml Hr fan r. corluttue fnthtni Hr lip wr cerinln. 'ni. Her ejr. AU. hew thpy txrknneil -jne , the nrncc of hr ahin.lnn Ah me. cili inly. tviiwt um. tlfr crouch irS,,ly..lt,.,,i S5 Woe1 'w nw ..,. -- " "". "IVi Ta.rdaTnT7..,r VWi b"',arl "' aaa?. bi? urenc-tn- auman has a pystetn of bin own when l, ,.. te Ntudvlnc. He Marled i.i. "" i " 'rearnnan year. , but he found that they were a hfn- quently he threw away his notibeoks and relied altogether upon IiIh memory In class he listens attentively nnd makes mental neten f the lilghllihts In the lectures Then he tries t, K1 M all related facts en a subject In hli mind. "" The only time he actuallv studies is when he Is out of n job for a week Then hr rends metllclnn for ,,r twelve hours nt a stretch. When la finds something te de be puts awai t ha books. ' "" SJ""." A! JJH Upen, that fteadl. k, fl&&ta'iqs4if; ;'-li x Sulie. Kv ittna Jthv .i iA ) .(. -i'4'iA VJ A J-ZS