University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)

 - Class of 1921

Page 178 of 266

 

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 178 of 266
Page 178 of 266



University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 177
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University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 179
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Page 178 text:

ADDRESS OF DR. JOSEPH R. RANSOHOFF There never was a river without its mists of gray. There never was a forest without its fallen leaf; And joy may walk heside L15 clown the winding of our way, When, lo! there sounds a footstep and we meet. the face of grief. Applause hearty and prolonged, greeted Dr. Joseph Ransohoff as he arose to deliver his address on HDrain? and Holmes. for he was well helnved. Now that his mustErful mind has been stilled in death, the 1055, particularly to these who looked forward to attending his lectures, is felt most keenly. The full text of Dr. Ransohoff's scholarly address: will he found in another portion of the YeareBOOk. CONFERRING OF HONORARY DEGREES On an occasion like this. said President Hicks. ilit is very fltLing that special recognition should be given for eminent scholarship and public service. It is our privilege to have with us today some who worthiiy represent both of these, and it is my privilege as representative of the University to confer the degrees that shall bear the honor. Recipients of the Degree of Doctor of Science iiBy virtue of the authority vestEd in ma. continued President Hicks, i'hy the Board of Directors of the University Of Cincinnati, and upon recom- mendation 0f the Medical College Faculty, I confer the honorary degree of Doctor 0! Science, up011:--- Dr. Charles Cassidy Bass. Professor of Experimental Medicine. and Di- rector of Laboratories. Tulane University. for first successfully isolating the malarial parasite and for able aesislance rendered in the fight against malaria and scurvy. Dr. Ross Granville Harrison, Professor of Comparative Anatomy, Yale University, and Director Of the Marine Bacteriological Laboratory, for ilrb'l. demonstrating the possibility of growing tissues outside the organism. Edwin Oakee Jnrdan, Professor nf Bacteriology. University of Chicago, and member of the International Health Board, Rockefeller Foundation, for his experimental contributions to the sanitation of water supplies and the study of microbic diseases. Dean Dewitt Lewis. Professor of Surgery. University Of Chicago, for his work on the hypophysie and on nerve surgery, whose unselfish desire to promote the welfare of mankind caused him to retire from private practice that he might devote himself to scientific research. Robert VVilliaInsun anett, Professor of Harvard Medical School, for his work on the mechanism of the human spine and research in infantile paralysis. Filmer Verner McColltlm, Professor of Chemical Hygiene, School of Hygiene and Public Health. Johns Hopkins University, for his contributions to our knowledge of food deficiency diseases. William Snow Miller, Professor of Anatomy, University of Wisconsin, for his work on the. anatomy of the lungs. Charles Rupert Stockard. Professor of anatomy, Cornell University Medical School, for his investigations in experimental embryology and his inspiring leadership in research. Page One Hundred SewenJy-sdx

Page 177 text:

Sctlgcwiclc, nmdcrn tnetlicttl Ctlut'ntimt has for tho 1110541 pttl't cultnncctl lumtl in hand with mntlern medicine Out host merliml svhnnla .tru tntltty tcmplus of medical science and training schools of medical cnginccringt 'l'ht-it' mursuh ttre long and arduouse. their stantlardz-s high. thcir illhlleClitJll htlllllfl. thnrtmgh. and conscientious. Thcy prepare thcir pupilh Lulmimhly for inst Inlinnztl serViCC and for privatt: practice. Their graduates itrt: wull qttztlitit'tl us minislt'r: of that uriginal anti funtlztrnenlal fltnt'litm hf the Diu'sit'iHIth-thtt zn'l nf htmlintg. Oppcrtunities in the Field of Public Health 'lThcrc is. however. one vast and impurtam l'lL'ltl nl' murlurn tm-rlivittt- Ihtts lair sadly neglected by all medical schools. even by the very hast. and that is the held of public health. W'e have outgrown the ancient pnint of Vitixt'lxt'hitth held that ithey that are whale need not El physician but they that are 5it'k,' fur virt'e ilPlitJVF'. that the maintenance Ur thv public healthhthe heztlth of HIV propit- -is no less important and often easier. than ii the cure of their disease. Tittlzty we have in every one of our forty-cight states Ll State Department of Public Health, for the proper administration of which at least fm'ty-L-ight experts in public health and sanitary science arc- neecled, with two or thrcc times its many more for field 01' labtn'atoty wut'k. Thu United States Public Health Service also requires srurcs ut' qualitiutl public huullh UITIFQ'IH. untl hzttls great difhculty in Obtaining them. Still nthers are needed by the Army and Th? Navy. while hundreds of Amcrican CUUlltiCL-E. citics. towns and rural rcgiunh. either already have or should have full-timrs, trained health OHiCE'Tr-L Private HH-lilh Agtlnt'itts also. such as the International Health Bttartl Hi the Rockefeller Foundation. Anti-TLtlJchLlloaiis Sticieties. the Red Cl'tlh'rh 11ml many others. HR: at prewnt seriously handit'appwl in their lwnt-Ftrtznt undertakings by finding it Llil'llllt-il impossible to till the placus which they have. with Competent. trained pcrmnncl. The Field of industrial medicine 11nd industrial hygicnt' is. also loudly Htlling fur trnim-tl workers. whilt: schtml physicians who are rually expert, mental hygienistm auciul hygienists and dental hygienists art- likewise greatly nt-t-tlt-tl. The Unique Position of the Medical College HI hrittgtr to you. Mr. President, Dr. Sedgewick suitl in Crmclllsinlt. :mtl In you. gentlemen nf the Bnnrrl nf Dirermrs. to you. Members of thc lit-tt'ully. illlli to the student hmly. 21ml uspurially to the citizens of Cincinnati tn whnm this College is :m ornament and a distinction, the congratulations: and felit'ittttinm of this other educational institutions of the land. If in the future you Hittlii make it possible In add to the excellent medical education which you nmv git'tu Utlttcatimt in public health. in preventive medicine. in preventive sanitation 21ml in prevt-ntive hygiene, opportunity for which is nowhere t-itJ great '45 in a muni- cipal university -ynu will not only deserve and win the applause,- nf a grateful community. but will brazc the way for El. rt-l'urtzt itnpcralivcly HCC'l'lel in rather ttwdiml colleges. Mutlcrn medicine must provide a training for the pz'utttittc uf ptthlic health no less rigorous them that fur the prztt'litre 0f medicine; for tht- public health is the health of the people, and att-j llIL' Lutin phrase put it sum papal! xttpremu t'ex. Puge' 0:10 Htmdrcd Sc't'cnty-jtt'e



Page 179 text:

Henry Baldwin Ward, Professor of Zoology, University of Illinois, for his contributions to our knowledge of the animal parasites of man. Edward Carl Rosunuw. University of Minnesota, hiir hi5 vulu'dbic contribui lions to our knowledge of the large class of diseases received from focal infection. John Clarence Webstert Professor of Obstetrics and Gynmtology, Medical Department. University of Chicago, and Fellow of the Royal Society for hiss. researches in female pelvic anatomy and successive contributions to the general field of obstetrica. Recipients of Degree of Doctor of Laws By virtue of the authority vested in me by the Board Of Directors of the University of Cincinnati and upon recommendation of the Medical Faculty: I confer the following degrees of Doctor of Lawszh Ludwig Hektoen, Professor of Pathology. Rush Medical College, Chicagn, for his contribution of our knowledge of immunity and his inHucncc in devel- oping the research spirit in the Middle West. Frederick G. Navy. Prnfessnr of Bacteriology and Director of thc Hygienic Laboratory of the University of Michigan. for his contributions to the nature of bacterial poisons and their action. and for demonstrating the possibility of cultivating certain rare parasites. Honorabio John Barton Payne. Secretary of the lnteriort distinguished citizcn. wise judge and eminent statesman for his valuable legal servicea as General Counsel for the United States Shipping Board 11nd Director General of Railroads and for his wise leadership as Chairman of the United States Ship- ping Board and as Secretary of the Interior. Joseph R. Ransohoff. Professor of Surgery. University of Cincinnati, foliage of Med'cine and Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons. for his Illarstcry of surgery and for his inspiring and efficient service to the cause of medical utlucu- Lion. William Thompson Sedgwick. professor of Binlogy and PLlhliF Health. Massachusetts Inbtitute of 'l'echnology, for his. distinguished sm'vivc as leader in the development of public health instruction. Louis Schwab. public spirited citizen and distinguishul alumnus, tm' his valuable services as Citizen and as administrator in this municipality which fostered the institution whose honorabTe career of 100 years we are met to celebrate. Mary Muhlcnbcrg Emery, much beimrecl citizen of Cinciniu-iIL for her contribution to the promuliun of medical education and for her largv heart and wise philantruphy and fur hur Example of noble womanhood. Christian K. Holmes, late Dean of the t'nllege of Medicine, Uniwrsity nl' Cincinnati, distinguished c'tizcn. eminent tmrher and administrator. for his services to medical education and t0 the general welfare of humanity in the building and equipping of the Cincinnati General Hospital and the University of Cincinnati Medical School. auid for his inspiring leadership :15 teacher and Dean of the College of Medicine. 30 long as the annals of medical erlumtirm in Cincinnati are preserved so long will the name of Holmes be remembered and honored. Page Om: Hundred S'nwzry-setlm

Suggestions in the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) collection:

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 181

1921, pg 181

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 121

1921, pg 121

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 246

1921, pg 246

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 197

1921, pg 197

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 16

1921, pg 16

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine - Annual Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 139

1921, pg 139


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