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Page 10 text:
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THE CLINIC NINETEEN-SIXTEEN The present college building, devoted to the more formal part of medical teaching, was completed and dedicated in 1899. It is a modern, Ere-proof building, providing lecture and recitation rooms, amphithxeatres, laboratories, library, teaching museum, adminis- trative rooms, research rooms, and other rooms for special purposes. During the erection of the college building, the laboratory building which had been first opened and equipped for teaching chemistry, microscopy and physiology during the session 1878-79, was remodeled and new departments were added. In june, 1907, a new and large hospital was built and opened for the reception of patients. It has accommodations for about 366 patients, and affords students the greatest possible opportunities for medical observation and study. Six operating rooms are available for section teaching, and classrooms are adjacent to the wards. Immediately contiguous to the new hospital is a large clinical amphitheatre, having a seating capacity of 600. ,The out-patient service of this hospital is one of the largest in the World, 124,969 visits being made by patients during the year ending May 31, 1915, and 7725 cases treated in the wards and private rooms of the institution. Through a generous gift from Mr. Daniel Baugh, a Trustee, the Daniel Baugh 'Institute of Anatomy was completed and dedicated in September, 1911. This building is located at Clinton and Eleventh Streets, and is equipped to adequately meet the demands of the department of anatomy, including biology, histology and embryology, affording facilities in these branches which, it is believed, are unexcelled in this country. . The medical service was extended in 1913 by the acquisition of the old Phipps Institute property located at 236 and 238 Pine Street. These buildings were completely renovated and modernized, and now constitute the department for diseases of the chest. Among other men of national and international reputation who have occupied chairs in Jefferson may be mentioned Nathan R. Smith, called by French surgeons the HNestor of American Surgery, john K. Mitchell, first advocate of the cryptogenic origin of acute infectious fevers, and whose son, the eminent S. Weir' Mitchell, was also a son. of Jefferson, Robley Dunglison, the Father of American Physiology, Franklin Bache, who with VVood brought out the first edition of the U. S. Dispemazfovfy, Joseph Pancoast, anatomist and most famous surgeon of his day, I. A. Meigs, the anthropol- ogist, Samuel D. Gross, the first and greatest of modern American surgeons, J. H. Brinton, the founder of the great army medical museum, J. M, DaCosta, the foremost medical diagnostician of his day, Roberts Bartholow, eminent for his early recognition of the importance of sanitary science, VV. S. Forbes, the Father of the Anatomical Act, Drake Mutter, and many others, all of whom exercised a profound influence upon medical history in the United States, and by their associations with Jefferson made the institution famous in medical annals. At the present time there are in the College twenty-one active members of the Faculty of equal rank and responsibility, four emeritus professors and one honorary professor. These men are aided in their work by the assistance of one hundred and nineteen medical men connected with the College and Hospital. From its foundation to the end of the session 1914-15, 13,278 men have graduated from the College. V ERNEsT G. XNILLIAMSON. 9
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Page 9 text:
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Page 11 text:
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THE CLINIC NINETEEN-SIXTEEN Z' DANIEL BAUGH INSTITUTE OF ANATOMY 10
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