University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)

 - Class of 1909

Page 93 of 232

 

University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 93 of 232
Page 93 of 232



University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 92
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University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 94
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Page 93 text:

examining and licensing boards. The Association of American Medical Colleges dropped us from her honor roll, a discredit to which we were not entitled. But today every state in our broad land welcome the alumni of our college, and you will find your diploma a letter of credit with every examining and licensing board in the country. Of the twelve schools in the state of Missouri there are only two, the Washington University of St. Louis, and the State University at Columbia, that stand a-s high in the educational world, and they enjoy about the same points of credit as we do. In the United States there are only eight or ten medical colleges that out-rank us, and they are institutions with large endowment. How do we stand with the National Association of Medical Colleges? I will tell you, We not only have been taken into her confidence by reinstatement, but in the last seven years our school has been honored by having one of its faculty twice called to the presidency of the National Body, a distinction no other college in the United States claims. Now what is the cause of this great prosperity? Is it an incidental condition as a lesult of good times? No. For when we look around us, we find that in the last five or six years a large number of medical schools have closed their doors, or consolidated with other schools, largely on account of the advanced requirements necessary for ad- mission and graduation. With us we saw the handwriting on the wall. We knew that it was quality more than quantity that would win out, and we adopted that as our standard. That, coupled with a thorough and scientific course of medicine and sur- gery, taught by up-to-date educators, who search the hospitals and laboratories of both continents each, year to secure the latest ideas and technique in teaching, and which is presented in such a manner easily grasped by the student, and supplying him with thorough understanding of the fundamental branches in medicine, as well as equipping him with the latest discoveries here and abroad, is what gives our college its enviable reputation among medical colleges.

Page 92 text:

an-is -' .' Ao , gl ups- Qeminiarenrez nf the Evan BY SAMUEL C. JAMES, M. D., Professor of Principals and Practice of Medicine and Clinical Medicine. ' HEN asked for an article, with the above caption, I feel like asking you to come with me across the dim vista of the past, and kindly help me to brush away the webs from my brain, as I hardly know where to commence my story or what to say when I do. Must I tell the readers of the Scalpel the truth, the whole truth, and noth- ing but the truth, about your short-comings, the little differences that occurred between you and the dean from time to time? We can't do it, boys, for everything was wiped off 'tOld Dad's memory, when you said you wouldn't do it any more. These stories that you hear around the college about rough houses, stairway rushes, explosive chemicals, attached to the benches by forgetful .students are fabrica- tions-criminal lies. Again when some colleague speaks about the unfinished parades that were suddenly checked by offensive police interfernce, with free rides thrown in, I stand ready to prove an alibi. Show me the man who ever saw disarranged benches, pyramids of chairs, ornamented with detached chandeliers, and I will say to him, You of clean hands speak outj' and not one charge will be made. Again, during my seven years of administration as dean I never saw but one of you enter the doors of a saloon, and when that fact was mentioned from the arena there were only fifteen that acknowl- edged a visit to a similar place and each one had a valid excuse. Vlfe shall not dig up any skeletons, in fact, we do not know their resting place. U. M. C. ha-s her foot ball, sing-sing clubs, her brass band, her Aesculapian, Beta and Delta societies. As of yore our freshmen are ignored, our sophom-ores tolerated, our juniors recognized, and our seniors adored. It is with pleasure that my mind can wander back to the days when you as members of the class of '08 and others visited the deanis office for the first time, some of you with bright expectant faces, full of hope and vigorous determination to succeed, and others seemingly without a thought of the vicissitudes and problems that would confront them. Some in the past, had the coun- sel and careful guidance of loving parents, and later, the advice and watchful care of painstaking instructors. Others were men of mature years who had tried without suc- cess other professions and occupations and turned to medicine as their las-t hope. With it all a large majority of you have 'fproved out and are a credit to your Alma Mater. I have talked to you about yourselves, and now I will have a few words to say about U. M. C. The University Medical College is entering on her twenty-eighth year of school life. This institution opened its eyes and put on its swaddling clothes for the first time in the office of our esteemed friend and honored trustee, Professor Flavel B. Tiffany. From a class of ten or twelve students and an empty treasury it has ad- vanced to a college of national reputation, and today we have a graded class of over two hundred men, largely college graduates, each student forced to meet high pre- liminary requirement before being admittd. Now as to the graduation requirements we are ranked with the best schools of our land, It was only a few years ago that our diplomas were barred by some of the state



Page 94 text:

52122115 nt' thc lgrnfeaainn BY J. M. ALLEN, A. M., M. D., L. L. D. Professor of Diseases of the Abdomen. benefited by his having lived You have selected for your profession one of the 'if broadest fields that civilization offers for individual renown as well as the greatesi possible chance for benefiting and increasing the happiness of the human family. You must not forget that when Darwin announced his theory of survival of the fittest that it covers all the past as well as all the future of the human race. Applying this to man it is intellectual development that makes him survive the conflict and battle of life. There- fore you must decide today that you will be students of nature and science as long as life lasts and by this be enabled to add many new facts to the glorious profession that you have selected, to gain and retain the good will of your profession without which the life of a physician is a failure. Therefore you should at once get a copy of the code of Medical Ethics and study them well and thoroughly. They will teach you your correct relations to the members of your profession and to the public. And let no tempta- tion seduce you, no matter how flattering from the strong anchoring of a thorough knowl- edge of the medical code of ethics. Don't be disheartened because all of our public prints are filled by the advertisement of charlatans-and quacks, and boasted cures of special diseases, because this charlatanism' has existed long before the days of Hippo- crates and is gradually failing before education and intellectual development and will finally be obliterated by truth itself. And if you follow the advice I have given you, you will be one of an army whose armor is truth, which banished falsehood in the world. The supreme moment of a man's life is when he takes his last look on this earth at his past life. If his life has been guided by truth and a large vein of humanitarianism there is within him that which says, God's will be done. If on the other hand his life has been full of untruth, fraud and deception, I would imagine in this aftermath there would be wailing and gnashing of teeth and a coward would be before the bar of God. Be truthful, be honest, cultivate humanitarianism. Also be an optimist. Remember that there never was a cloud -so black but what the sun was shining back of it. HE objects and aims of every individual should be such that the world has been ' ns

Suggestions in the University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) collection:

University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 36

1909, pg 36

University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 228

1909, pg 228

University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 231

1909, pg 231

University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 126

1909, pg 126

University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 36

1909, pg 36

University Medical College - Scalpel Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 214

1909, pg 214


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