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LECTURERS.

Francis B. Greenough, M.D., and Edward Wigglesworth, Jr., M.Ó., on Syphilis.

J. Orne Green, M.D., and Clarence J. Blake, M.D., on Otology. James R. Chadwick, M.D., on Diseases of Women.

Charles P. Putnam, M.D., on Diseases of Children.

James J. Putnam, M.D., on Diseases of the Nervous System.

GRADUATES IN MEDICINE IN 1874.

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George O. Jenkins.
Seth W. Kelley.

Francis B. Loring.
Stephan C. Martin.
Edward J. Moors.
William E. Moseley.
Duncan B. Myshrall.
George W. Porter.
Andrew F. Reed.
Thomas M. Rotch.
Edmund D. Spear.
Hugh J. Speer.
Flavel S. Thomas.
Edward T. Tucker.
Herbert Warren.
William H. Wescott.
Morris P. Wheeler.
Francis B. Wilder.
Charles H. Williams.

Dental Department of Harvard University.

The Dental School corresponds in the times and in many of the lectures to those of the Medical School.

This School offers superior advantages, in that, while the instruction will be no less thorough in those departments peculiar to Dentistry, it gives the student unusual facilities for the study of Anatomy, Physiology, Surgery, and Chemistry; as the dental student pursues the same course in them as is required of the medical student, and in common with him has free access to the hospitals of the city, to the Microscope Room, the Chemical and

Physiological Laboratories, the Dissecting Rooms, Library, and Museum of the Medical College, and the University Lectures. The last are special courses, delivered by men eminent in their departments, and embrace a wide range of medical and collateral branches.

The establishment of the School in Boston secures to it, in connection with the Medical Department, those advantages for clinical instruction which are found only in large cities.

The Professors teach by lectures, recitations, and clinics; and, under the direction of Demonstrators, patients are assigned to the students, who thus have an opportunity of operating at the chair, and becoming familiar by actual practice with all operations demanded of the dental practitioner.

Instruction in this School is given throughout the academic year, and is divided into two equal terms. The first, or Winter Term, commences on the last Thursday in September, and continues till February. After a recess of one week the Spring Term commences, and continues till the last Wednesday in June. There is also a recess of one week at Christmas. Attendance upon the Winter Term only is required for graduation.

The Spring Term is designed as an equivalent, entirely or in part, to pupilage with private preceptors, and affords better and more comprehensive instruction than can possibly be obtained in a private office. Operative and Mechanical Dentistry are taught daily by practical work in the Infirmary and Laboratory. Anatomy, Physiology, Chemistry, and Surgery are taught as fully as during the Winter Term. Practical Anatomy is taught in the Dissecting Room till May.

Operative Dentistry - The instructions in this department are both didactic and practical. The Professor and assistants endeavor to demonstrate all known methods of performing operations upon the teeth and other tissues involved.

The development of the teeth, treatment of irregularities, origin and treatment of decay, materials used for filling teeth, the most improved instruments used in operating, &c., are appropriately treated of. Clinics are held at the Infirmary, and every available means used to make the student practically acquainted with all the modern improvement his important branch of Dental Science.

Physiological Laboratories, the Dissecting Rooms, Library, and Museum of the Medical College, and the University Lectures. The last are special courses, delivered by men eminent in their departments, and embrace a wide range of medical and collateral branches.

The establishment of the School in Boston secures to it, in connection with the Medical Department, those advantages for clinical instruction which are found only in large cities.

The Professors teach by lectures, recitations, and clinics; and, under the direction of Demonstrators, patients are assigned to the students, who thus have an opportunity of operating at the chair, and becoming familiar by actual practice with all operations demanded of the dental practitioner.

Instruction in this School is given throughout the academic year, and is divided into two equal terms. The first, or Winter Term, commences on the last Thursday in September, and continues till February. After a recess of one week the Spring Term commences, and continues till the last Wednesday in June. There is also a recess of one week at Christmas. Attendance upon the Winter Term only is required for graduation.

The Spring Term is designed as an equivalent, entirely or in part, to pupilage with private preceptors, and affords better and more comprehensive instruction than can possibly be obtained in a private office. Operative and Mechanical Dentistry are taught daily by practical work in the Infirmary and Laboratory. Anatomy, Physiology, Chemistry, and Surgery are taught as fully as during the Winter Term. Practical Anatomy is taught in the Dissecting Room till May.

Operative Dentistry — The instructions in this department are both didactic and practical. The Professor and assistants endeavor to demonstrate all known methods of performing operations upon the teeth and other tissues involved.

The development of the teeth, treatment of irregularities, origin and treatment of decay, materials used for filling teeth, the most improved instruments used in operating, &c., are appropriately treated of. Clinics are held at the Infirmary, and every available means used to make the student practically acquainted with all the modern improvements of this important branch of Dental Science.

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