Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick is confident that Osler will be satisfied with the results of the recent meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee when the United States Society for the Study of Tuberculosis is fully organized. Flick is worried about raising the necessary funds to sustain a new Journal of Tuberculosis.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick is pleased with Sternberg's proposed constitution and by-laws for the newly formed United States Society for the Study of Tuberculosis. However, Flick feels that his own plan of organization would achieve better results.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick . Arrangements for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee and Professor Maragliano's lecture in Philadelphia.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Arrangements for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee and Professor Maragliano's lecture in Philadelphia.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Arrangements for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee and Professor Maragliano's lecture in Philadelphia.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Arrangements for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee and Professor Maragliano's lecture in Philadelphia.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Arrangements for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee and Professor Maragliano's lecture in Philadelphia. Flick agrees with Osler that Maragliano's work is questionable. He does not agree, however, that the Committee should attach itself to Daniel Lewis's Congress on Tuberculosis. Still, Flick has invited Lewis to Philadelphia to hear what he has to say about his work with Tuberculosis.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick agrees with Osler that they ought not to organize a third Congress on Tuberculosis to counteract the work of Daniel Lewis and Clark Bell. However, he would like to form a national association, which could prepare the way for an International Congress on Tuberculosis in the U.S. in 1906 or 1907. From what he has heard, he maintains that Lewis's Congress will be a discredit to the country and to the medical profession.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick has just received a cable from Maragliano saying that he is ill and unable to attend the conference in Philadelphia. Flick feels that this is a bit of an embarrassment after all the arrangements have been made and as all those invited were anxious to meet with Maragliano and hear his lecture. Flick would like to change the luncheon he had planned in Maragliano's honour into a dinner.
Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick had taken Osler's advice and will have the abstract and English version of Maragliano's lecture distributed. Flick adamantly refuses to associate himself in any way with Daniel Lewis and his Congress on Tuberculosis. If the majority of the men at the upcoming meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee agree to join with Lewis, Flick will do nothing to embarrass them, but will still refrain from participating. He would like to organize instead a United States Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, with Trudeau as president and Jacobs as secretary, which could make arrangements to bring the International Congress on Tuberculosis to the U.S.