Our alma mater fifty years ago1861 - 44 sider |
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Side 7
... impressions of passing events gener- ally retain their vividness with a tenacious grasp . As we advance in life , all later scenes may be obliterated from the memory , or remem- bered only with a mere glimmer of reality . The ...
... impressions of passing events gener- ally retain their vividness with a tenacious grasp . As we advance in life , all later scenes may be obliterated from the memory , or remem- bered only with a mere glimmer of reality . The ...
Side 7
... impressions of passing events gener- ally retain their vividness with a tenacious grasp . As we advance in life , all later scenes may be obliterated from the memory , or remem- bered only with a mere glimmer of reality . The ...
... impressions of passing events gener- ally retain their vividness with a tenacious grasp . As we advance in life , all later scenes may be obliterated from the memory , or remem- bered only with a mere glimmer of reality . The ...
Side 20
... impression conveyed to his hearers was , that no assertion he made was to be doubted , no opinion he advanced could be controverted . He always seemed thoroughly to understand his subject , and appeared familiar with the whole range of ...
... impression conveyed to his hearers was , that no assertion he made was to be doubted , no opinion he advanced could be controverted . He always seemed thoroughly to understand his subject , and appeared familiar with the whole range of ...
Side 22
... impression . The Doctor was very fond of a double entendre , and em- ployed it even when its propriety was a little doubtful . Tardy attendance and listless hearers he could not endure ; and he had different ways of correcting such ...
... impression . The Doctor was very fond of a double entendre , and em- ployed it even when its propriety was a little doubtful . Tardy attendance and listless hearers he could not endure ; and he had different ways of correcting such ...
Side 32
... impression was perfect where the atten- tion had been given . It was his uniform cus- tom , at the commencement of the ... impressions of respect and veneration so profound as those produced by this delightful man - this model lecturer ...
... impression was perfect where the atten- tion had been given . It was his uniform cus- tom , at the commencement of the ... impressions of respect and veneration so profound as those produced by this delightful man - this model lecturer ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
affable Alma Mater ALUMNI ASSOCIATION anecdote associated capacity attention Barclay Street Bellevue bill for medical Blackwell's Island BLATCHFORD Bloomingdale Botany bright eye character clinique cocked-hat College of Physicians color Columbia College commencement course of medical David Hosack delivered delivery DeWitt Diploma diseases dispensaries Doctor druggist dura mater faculty furnish graduate Griscom hair hall of science Hammersly honorable House Physician institutions JAMES FOUNTAIN JOHN TORREY Latin lecture room listened low voice MAURAN McNevin MEDICAL CHARITIES Medical College Medical Patriots Medical Science medical students memory menced Mitchell nations and indi Natural Philosophy never seemed nine worthy Nitrous Oxyd noble occasion occasionally Osborn patient Physicians and Surgeons playful pleasant popular professional Randall's Island request scholar scientific acquirements seldom disappoint solution of Nitrate Staten Island subjects thing thousand persons tion tleman took ture United States Army VEDDER venerable versitatis WRIGHT POST York young gentlemen
Populære passager
Side 7 - Like the vase in which roses have once been distilled — You may break, you may shatter the vase if you will, But the scent of the roses will hang round it still.
Side 3 - Association of the College of Physicians and Surgeons (Medical Department of Columbia College), New York, ten thousand dollars, with one-half of which to found a "Cartwright prize...
Side 25 - Were you poor, would you \ike a rich man thus to treat you ? Is that doing to others as you would that others should do to you?" He laughed, and rejoined, " Oh, Oastler, we never mix religion with trade. [" God is not in all their thoughts."] Our object in trade is to get what money we can.
Side 3 - Hospital constantly furnishes to the student about two hundred patients, of both sexes, suffering under every form of...