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Page 47 text:
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, lOls )ISPENSER ...AND PROGRESS?! 1 ' k stitk- in a healthy condhinn. Excerpt from The People ' s Common Sense Medical Adviser, by R.V. Pierce, M.D., 1935, Buffalo. Sponsored by the Department of Anesthesiology ' IVsticIc u;i--!c«I liv M i '
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Page 46 text:
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TOWARDS MODERN TIMES . . . ANNUAL AXNOUXCr.M KNT GEiNEVA .MEDICAL COLLEGE. r » SESSION OF lf?09-0O. RULES AND REGULATIONS Every Ktudent, prerious to his attendance upon Iccturrs, J ' hall wait upon llic Dean, in order to register his ninte. n: idvftce, and the name of ihc practiliont.1 with whom he has pursued his ine ]ical studiei:. and shall pay a matriculati ' in fee of eight dollars. He is recommended at the same lime tn take a general li» k»l, hy payin;; $:jJ. o, whi h will entide him to the ticket of each ur ' fe»v r. Uthcrwi he shall ol tnin them within ten days after the commencement of lectures m any ilepartment from tlic respective professors. t ui ils who haTr atlendeil two full courses uf medical lecturcft, one of which i ouraes has been at this cnlU-gt-, are admilltc i without the [ aymcnt of Urture fees. Those «Jio have attended two full euUfMLS at other medi -al in «tiluions will Im- kd- ttetl to their l]rsl course at this college for one thirti uf the lecture fee in ad ' ltti ' ti :o the matriculation fee. DlKililCES. The candidate for the mcilical decree must be twenty-one years of age, of tr-Mwl noral character, have attended two full courses of oitdiral lecture , the la t at ihi- nstitutioii, nnd must exhibit satisfactory evidence of having prose utitl the Rlu-iy Df medicine for throe years under the direction of some rcjipc-taWe phy triBIl. He must also utidir jo an examination by the professors, in their rvsjK-ctivt; ,j .tulu-. n the presence of the Board of Curators, and present— nd defend when rc |uirvd —a dissertation on some medical subject, compo: and written by himself. FEE-S, PAYABLE IX AD AX( E. fliti ifulation ; payable nrr, «»ty, tS.W iii ' ki ' ls Tnr the whole CourM »i.V (ira.lualion HfM lliinoh.-lralor ' s Ticktl, 3.00 Anatoniical Mutorial, . io Hiianl can be ol taiD«l from $2.00 to $3.00 per week. The Kacully |.leJi;e :hcni elvrs t ' spare no efforts that may contribute to the comfort of their pupils Hid their progress in professional study. Kurihei inlurnialiun may be obtained by addressing Prof. J. Towler. I lean of the Ka.ullv, (Jerieva, N, V.
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Page 48 text:
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4 Probing a painted skull • • . Complications of an M.I. . . . Cows ' milk is for calves . . . The student is on surgery to learn . . . Patients with post-pump psy- choses . . . Five things to remember out of our vast experience of medical school. Five out of hundreds of thousands — why remember these? It seems they each came to us via a face and mind eager to teach — from five people who taught well, and beyond academics, taught us how patients think, respond, and cope; how medical students and physicians do the same; how mistakes often precede our achievements; how to laugh and how to show frustration; and how, at the end of it all, to feel somehow accomplished. The hardest conviction to get into the mind of a be- ginner is that the education upon which he is engaged is not a college course, not a medical course, but a life course for which the work of a few years under teachers is but a preparation. — Sir William Osier And so with our feeling of accomplishment comes our heartfelt appreciation. We thank you. Dr. Benzo, for that extra and more insightful peek into our cadavers, and for easing those unknown bur- dens of freshman year; Dr. Cook, for weaving psychiatry with medicine and medicine with psychiatry and people with people and everything with a smile; Dr. Klumann, for stressing learning over labor and mak- ing us feel that someone did understand how a tired- eyed third-year student felt propped over a retractor; Dr. Oski, for Wednesday conferences on nutrition, death and dying, and such untaught subjects, and a Chairman ' s door that was always open; Dr. Rohner, for that amazing body of information you transmitted to us which we shall never forget and for ever know as Rohnerisms. TO YOU FIVE TEACHERS, for becoming to us all you are capable of being, for helping us to better understand the world of medicine and for taking a genuine inter- est in us as individuals, the Class of 1975, with our gratitude and affection, dedicates this yearbook to you. (
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