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Page 31 text:
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T3 65 6 ,, 9 5 I' 'O of Q. W ,yr 2- x 1 ffl' I 133'- fl ,, -I X Lei f lilies . g3s.I!'Z4'. -Y' E? N .Q'aj', I' A Q Q 15275-ft eg A N 'sfi ,nfl i, I, ' 'if 'I A :Fi fl-if 13? . 1.,2'g'zlf i ' is -' fm, I rifpi' 'fiifji 154' 3 ff, full' Q 'J9 Y5' ii, R if tr ,sygf b l- ' HERBERT Fox ggi 5h'?iEIg': . DIRk2CTOR, WILLIAM PEPPER CLINICAL LAnoRA'1'oRY , , A., i :L ii A.B., Central High School f1897j, M.D., Medical School, University of Pennsylvania fI901j, t Interned at Philadelphia General Hospital K 1901-1902 Q, ' Presbyterian Hospital H902-190325 Member Philadelphia Commission Butler Typhoid Epidemic H903 - 190-U, k:35'5f'-L Second Assistant to Albrecht in Vienna H905 5-5,1521 X ll H, Volunteer Associate, William Pepper Laboratory H904-190615 Chief of Laboratories, Penn- 'fail sylvania Department of Health K1 906-19111, Pathologist of Rush Hospital K from 190-tj, H., , Pathologist Children's Hospital f 1915-1924 jg Pathologist and Curator o f Museum Labura- tory of Comparative Pathology, Philadelphia Zoological Society ffrom 1906j, Director mg- William Pepper Laboratory of Clinical Medicine I from 19!Ij, Professor of Comparative , 7 'QQf,:- , Pathology, University of Pennsylvania K from 1927 'rf 5 Major, Medical Corps, U. S. A. H917-19192, in charge Cantonment Laboratory, Camp Zach- .45 ary Taylor, Louisville, K entucley, Professor of Comparative Pathology, University of f:'2 'I Pennsylvania f 1927 . fl-H giljlf Author: Elementary Bacteriology and Protozoology II9 12, 1915, I 919, 19261, swith Dr. 'jfft X 'F-F Alfred Stengel, Text-Book of Pathology K 1915, 1921, 1927j5 Disease in Captive Wild i-.diff-'9 Ni, I Mammals and Birds K 1924 Q, Member of A. M. A., College of Physicians, American I L-ff.: I Association Pathologists and Bacteriologists, and several smaller organizations. , Special Subjects of Investigations: Disease of the lymphatic apparatus and blood, comparative ,LV relation of these in human and lofwer animals , comparative pathology of tuberculosis , bacterial basis of human anemias, comparative study of rumors, report of original tissue K I . of Hodgkin from 1828. ' 'LI 'Hs fs., 'E CONGRATULATIONS upon the successful end of your work to enter the medical fraternity. ' 13.25 fwgil. Ma good luck accompany you. And this from :I laboratory man-do not neglect the art of G V 35.5 ll1CC?lCil'lC. ' llfifff. .L Thirty-tfwo
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Page 30 text:
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W 'Q HV SCQPE GEORGE WILLIAM NORRIS Pkoificssoa or CLINICAL lVlliDlClNl'I 5.1 --ia .,,, x i ,.r Y. 'L F3 :ff .- If 17 1 'w 5 . ,eil ii' 91 1 e ., .r 1 1 Vu, eye. , .-. '- .7' .AV ,I an, 4 r Adi., University of Pennslvlfvania llS95j, M.D., Uni-versiry of Pennsylfvania lltS'99Q5 Chief of Medical Service fl, Pennsylvania Hospital, F ellofw o f the College of Physicians, Philadelphia. Member of Ihe Association o f American Physicians, American Nledical Association, Palhological Society of Philadeljvhia, Academy of Natural Sciences, Alnlerican Clinical and Clinmrical Association, American Philosophical Society. Aulhor of Studies in Cardiac Pathology ll9llQ, Cronpons PIlE1llII0lllll,, in Osler and McCrae's Modern Medicine lI913j, Vol. 1, Blood Pressure, Its Clinical Aff'llC!lll0l1,,, F onrth edition 5 Diseases of the Chest and lhe Principles of Physical Diagnosis K I 917 Q, fin collaboration with H. R. M. Landisj fourlh ediliong also forty-eight articles on 'various topics appearing in lhe Medical Journals. Colonel, M. C., U. S. Army, Chief Medical Consnllanr, Fourth Army Corps, Lecturer on Toxic Gases, Arm-Uv School at Langresg Chief Medical Consnllanl for U. S. Hosjfilals in England, Ciled by Gen. Pershing lMarch-, 19202 For exceptionally Meritorious and Conspicuous Services as Senior Medical Consallanz in Medicine for Divisions in Tonl Seclor. DURING your course in medicine you must, at least at times, have been bewildered, discouraged and depressed by the multiplicity :md complexity of the facts, or supposed facts, which have been served as your daily menu. If such has been the ease it may console you to recall what Lessing wrote: Not the bare truth which everyone possesses or thinks he powesses, but the earnest endeavor which he has made to understand the whole truth-to get at the foundation of it-makes the worth of man. For it is not through its possession but rather through the search for it, that the powers are enlarged, which alone make for his growth towards perfection. Possession makes him quiet, indolcnt, proud. EK ' U ' I Thirry-one 1. ', .. tail. . ,y ?.'Z --fa , . wif I i 1 t 1 ,J 'I 15-'Z :lil 'J
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Page 32 text:
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.lj'G,. ' .,-'A ' ry. - H-- J-4 '. Q .,.,, sa,- Ji ' ' I S RAVDIN J. WILLIAM WHITE Pitolfnssoa or Rx-:si-:ARCH Suaex-:Rx B S., Iiulianaa Uni-versity 1916 ' 1VI.D., University o Pennsylmania 1918 - Chief Resirlent Physician, University Hospital H918-1920 - Prosector o Applied Anatomy H920-1922 ' Assistant Surgeon Philadelphia General Hospital 1919-1922 - Assistant Surgeon, Graduate School Hospitalls 1920-1923 - Assistant Surgeofn, University Hospilall H922-19294 - Surgeon University H ospilal 1930- - J. William White Assistant Professor of Research Surgery 1927-1929 ' J. William White Pro essor of Research Surgery H929 . Fellow: College of Physicians of Philadelphia, Academy of Surgery, and American Medical Association. M ember: Halstead Club, American Physiological Society, aml American Society of Experimental Pathology. 4 HEN Halstead began the use of the rubber glove surgeons in other clinics threw up their hands in despair. What was to become of the surgcon's tactus eruditus. The soundness of their use soon spread and now their omission brings forth the same scorn that their use previously brought. So too, the Roentgen ray brought misgivings to many surgeons who were skilled in the elicitation of crepitus. It is refreshing to note that thd tendency to disparage the introduction of scientific methods of diagnosis and treatment is rapidly passing. You are graduating at a very invigorating period in medical history. The future is what you make it- Good fortune! and A I . .NU v 'N 'n,.,'.- iff. - 'qzfsf ' .I-fpw .-. - ... ....,, .-3.-.1-l. 3. im S 8 M' 1' . ' Oo 09 W' . HE C y t lx . ta ' fri: N 7' 1 A xx - 1 I f il x l ' V A ll f is ' hi 0 - . . xi .Q j,::I 5.4, ' I - It-.-' t F ,:,5. i . , r 1, f i f 1, i 'L X J. I f 2 J, . Ai , f ' is l l, X .X 2 K lr ii r 1, f 1 '13 f' K' l 'lffif t be ' ' i I 5 s . I I V' ' V - id 12 YJ fs J Thirty-three
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