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  Vol. 101 No. 5, MAY 1958 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Halsted of Johns Hopkins: The Man and His Men.

By Samuel James Crowe, M.D. Price, $5. Pp. 247. Charles C Thomas, Publisher, 301-327 E. Lawrence Ave., Springfield, Ill., 1957.

William B. Bean, M.D., Reviewer

AMA Arch Intern Med. 1958;101(5):1010-1011.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

The long hand of the influence of Johns Hopkins grows with time. The forces determining this man's extensive and extending influence have been analyzed on many occasions by able historians and loyal disciples of the "great men of the Hopkins." Suffice it to say that the development of our modern medical school in the sense of a graduate school of higher learning in a university setting and later the expansion of full-time medicine into the clinical years enabled clinical science to achieve its ancient eminence as the mother of sciences. At The Johns Hopkins University it came to fruition guided by several physicians, scholars, and teachers, whose influence still prevails widely. Probably the only one of the great clinicians in the heyday of Johns Hopkins to leave a personal school was William S. Halsted, who exerted equal influence in the intensive training of a protracted residency program and his emphasis . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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