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ARTICLE |

THE RELATION OF THE UNIVERSITY TO THE MEDICAL SCHOOL

JACOB GOULD SCHURMAN, M.D.
JAMA. 1910;LIV(16):1281-1284. doi:10.1001/jama.1910.92550420001001a.
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ABSTRACT

The American people are universally distinguished for their business ability and business successes. We live, however, in a world of universal compensations and retributions. If we have an enormous business talent which has won for us a name in the field of trade and commerce, we tend to draw into this province all our other interests. The pulpit and the press are not infrequently denounced as organs of syndicated wealth. In this very city of Chicago, the colleges and universities of the country have recently been declared worthless by a multimillionaire citizen because their graduates have not been trained in the ways of money making. And if in this presence I do not say that the medical profession has been commercialized I do not hesitate to assert that many medical schools and colleges have been established for the pecuniary benefit of their promoters, with the result that we now

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