. History of the class of 1911 : Medical Department of Yale University . in vain! Our class distinguished itself in many ways. Ffarvey conceived andexecuted the idea of holding group classes for the study of moral andethical questions confronting us in Rfedicine; Harvey and Barnum wereelected to Sigma Xi; Harvey and L. H. Levy were on the Medical JournalBoard. Zunders football song, Score for Yale, was the biggest hit ofthe season. Sickness deprived us of Joe Harris advice on getting bywithout study. The class was nearly wiped out by an epidemic of blackeyes. We were saved, only to be subjecte


. History of the class of 1911 : Medical Department of Yale University . in vain! Our class distinguished itself in many ways. Ffarvey conceived andexecuted the idea of holding group classes for the study of moral andethical questions confronting us in Rfedicine; Harvey and Barnum wereelected to Sigma Xi; Harvey and L. H. Levy were on the Medical JournalBoard. Zunders football song, Score for Yale, was the biggest hit ofthe season. Sickness deprived us of Joe Harris advice on getting bywithout study. The class was nearly wiped out by an epidemic of blackeyes. We were saved, only to be subjected to the most unkindest cut of all June exams.—which school history will record as the greatest human sacrifice ever offered by a Junior class. After the smoke of battle, onlytwenty responded to the call. Together we joined hands and offered asilent toast to our departed classmates—departed on the first trains forBaltimore or Long Island; and we pledged ourselves to renewed efforts tomaintain the honor and dignity of our School and the Class of 1911. L. S. - Oi o 2U Senior Year In the chronicle of our last year, we first record the changes which wefound on our return after the summer vacation. Dr. Smith no longer occupiedthe deans office, but had given over the work to Dr. Blumer ; we missed theface of one whom we had come to know as a friend. From our own rankswe missed some of the comrades of the previous year, who have gone tocomplete their course in other schools; but we mustered twenty veterans,gathered for the last years work. We welcomed the clinical work after the three years of the dispensary there was always something interesting, for we werenovices so often; hardly had we begun to get the run of things before wewent to another clinic, where some of the old chronics, perhaps, assisted theinstructors in initiating us into a new field of practical medicine. But thered letter days were those when we presented cases before the at t


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectyaleuniversityschool