Scalpel : the 1911 yearbook of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania . icians, the County and State Medical Societies, the .\mericanMedical Association and the Pathological, Pediatric, and Xeurological all of these he was one of the most active members, and in several he hadserved as jiresiding officer. Of these various organizations the Association of .Ameri-can Physicians is the one in which membership would be most highly prized by aman of Dr. Kellys type. Its number is limited to one hundred and thirty-five andis made up of the most distinguished physicians of the United


Scalpel : the 1911 yearbook of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania . icians, the County and State Medical Societies, the .\mericanMedical Association and the Pathological, Pediatric, and Xeurological all of these he was one of the most active members, and in several he hadserved as jiresiding officer. Of these various organizations the Association of .Ameri-can Physicians is the one in which membership would be most highly prized by aman of Dr. Kellys type. Its number is limited to one hundred and thirty-five andis made up of the most distinguished physicians of the United States. Dr. Kellywas elected a member of this Association in 1902, that is, when he was aboutthirty-two years of age. This is. of necessity, a brief and imperfect summary of the professional workwhich has given his name a permanent record in the Annals of Medical Science. At a special meeting of the Faculty of the Womans Medical College of Penn-sylvania on March 3. iQii. to take action on the death of Professor Kelly, P. Henry presented the following minute:. 20 In the death of Aloysius Oliver Joseph Kelly the Faculty of the WomansMedical College of Pennsylvania has suffered a severe loss. Dr. Kelly became amember of that body in 1906 when he was elected Professor of Pathology, andsoon became a leader in its deliberations. This was in no wise due to self-assertion, but was the inevitable result of his mental qualities and his judicialcharacter. These were immediately perceived and appreciated by the members ofthe Faculty, who instinctively turned to him for advice on the numerous occasionswhen questions concerning the welfare of the students as a whole or as individualswere before it. Believing, as he did, that the success of a medical school is bettergauged by the efficiency than the number of its graduates, he was a leader in thecause of advanced medical education. Positive in his convictions, sometimesapparently dogmatic in their expression, he never gave offen


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectyearboo, bookyear1911