. History of the University of Michigan . ersity Professor is 96 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN [Chap. XII under obligations to add something to hisscience. At the same time the methods ofinstruction, as the opening of the new labor-atories suggests, have become much more de-monstrative and practical than before. Withinthe period named, members of the Faculty havecontributed more than five hundred originalarticles to current medical and scientific litera-ture, many of them embodying original re-search, to say nothing of numerous text-booksand laboratory manuals. considered in its broader relations. In


. History of the University of Michigan . ersity Professor is 96 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN [Chap. XII under obligations to add something to hisscience. At the same time the methods ofinstruction, as the opening of the new labor-atories suggests, have become much more de-monstrative and practical than before. Withinthe period named, members of the Faculty havecontributed more than five hundred originalarticles to current medical and scientific litera-ture, many of them embodying original re-search, to say nothing of numerous text-booksand laboratory manuals. considered in its broader relations. In hisannual report submitted to the Board inOctober 1888, President Angell arranged thearguments pro and con with much skill andthoroughness, reachmg the conclusion that itwas inexpedient to transfer any part of thework to Detroit; he urged rather the retentionof the University in its entirety at Ann Arbor,and recommended that additional hospital andclinical facilities should be provided. At thesame meeting, with a single dissenting UNnKRSITY HOSPITAL FROM SOUTHWEST, I904 Towards the close of the decade 1880-1890the removal proposition was renewed, but ina new form. It was not now proposed tocarry the whole school to Detroit, but onlythe clinical, or the major part of the clinical,instruction. This scheme was advocated bythe press and to some extent by the citizensof that city, and it was strongly supportedby influential members of the Faculty. Theold stories concerning the relative advantagesof large and small cities as seats for a MedicalSchool were told over again, and the subject cast by a member residing in Detroit, theBoard passed a resolution declaring that itwas neither practicable nor desirable to re-move the school to Detroit or elsewhere, inwhole or part, and that it was the settledpolicy of the Board to maintain the integ-rity of the University at Ann Arbor. , Professor of Surgery, and Dr. Froth-ingham, Professor of Materia Medica andOphthalmolog)^ w


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