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The School had its most critical time of improvement under the bearing of Dr. John J. Sheinin, who served as senior member and president from 1932 to 1966. The foundation effectively met the difficulties emerging from the rebuilding of American therapeutic training after the Flexner Report, a period in which more than 50% of all American medicinal schools consolidated or shut. In 1930, the School, by then known as the Chicago Medical School, moved to what would turn into one of the world's biggest collections of therapeutic offices. Found in downtown Chicago, this complex contained two undergrad colleges, three therapeutic schools, seven doctor's facilities, and universities of dentistry, drug store, and nursing.
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