. Baltimore : its history and its people. ers are common to bothboards. These boards have always worked in entire harmony with eachother. The working relations of the Hospital to the Medical Departmentof the University are so clearly set forth in the letter of Johns Hopkins,are so thoroughly established in practice, and are so definitely and unani-mously agreed upon by the two boards, that there can be no possibilitythat they will ever be disturbed. The University and the Hospital being thus closely linked togetherthrough the Medical School, which in a sense belongs to each, there natu-rally f


. Baltimore : its history and its people. ers are common to bothboards. These boards have always worked in entire harmony with eachother. The working relations of the Hospital to the Medical Departmentof the University are so clearly set forth in the letter of Johns Hopkins,are so thoroughly established in practice, and are so definitely and unani-mously agreed upon by the two boards, that there can be no possibilitythat they will ever be disturbed. The University and the Hospital being thus closely linked togetherthrough the Medical School, which in a sense belongs to each, there natu-rally follows a sharing of the expense of maintenance of the school—thosedepartments of medical science which are not directly concerned with thework of the Hospital, such as anatomy, physiological chemistry and pharma-cology, being sustained by the LIniversity from the special revenues of theschool; while those departments which are indispensable for the conduct ofthe Hospital, such as pathology, medicine, surgery, gynecology and obstet- 608. .liillNS llnl-KINS IIiiSIMIAI, ANh lA IW Al


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1912