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$200; for one term alone, $120; graduation, $30. No degrees can be conferred until all dues to the school are discharged. Four yearly scholarships have been established, of the value of $200 each, open to meritorious students who have been at the school for one or two years. Graduates' Course. For the purpose of affording to those who are already graduates in medicine additional facilities for pursuing clinical, laboratory, and other studies, for which they had not previously found leisure, in such subjects as may specially interest them, and as a substitute in part for the opportunities heretofore sought for in Europe, the Faculty have established a course for graduates, of which the following is a programme :—

Histology. The various methods of examining the different tissues are employed, and opportunities for original research are offered. Fee, twenty dollars per term.

Physiology. Opportunities for original investigation in the physiological laboratory. Fee, thirty dollars per term. Medical Chemistry.— Practical instruction in the chemical laboratory in the analysis of the urine and other animal fluids in health and disease, and of poisons; examination of blood stains and other objects connected with medico-legal investigations, with the application of the microscope to these processes. General analysis also, if desired. Laboratory fee, thirty dollars per term.

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Pathological Anatomy. Practical instruction in Pathological Histology and the examination of specimens in the microscopical laboratory; and opportunity for witnessing and making autopsies. Fee, twenty dollars per term.

Surgery. A practical course of operative surgery, and instruction in the application of bandages and apparatus. Fee, twenty-five dollars per term.

Auscultation, Percussion, and Laryngoscopy practically taught, and diseases of the larynx demonstrated by the aid of the oxyhydrogen light. Fee, twenty dollars per term. Ophthalmology. Clinical instruction, lectures on diseases of the eye, and demonstrations of the methods of per

forming operations. Exercise in the use of the ophthalmoscope. Fee, twenty-five dollars per term.

Lectures and clinical instruction on diseases Fee, fifteen dollars per term.

Otology. of the ear. Dermatology.

Clinical instruction in diseases of the skin, illustrated by patients in this department of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Lectures. Fee, twenty-five dollars per term.

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Syphilis. Clinical instruction at the Boston Dispensary and the Marine Hospital. (Second term.) Fee, fifteen dollars.

Psychological Medicine. Lectures on mental diseases. (Second term.) Fee, five dollars.

Lectures.

Diseases of the Nervous System. - Practical illustrations of the application of various forms of electricity. Fee, fifteen dollars per term.

Gynecology. - Lectures on diseases of women.

ond term.) Fee, ten dollars.

Obstetrics. Cases supplied. midwifery. Fee, ten dollars.

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Those pursuing this course may elect the studies to which they will give their attention, and allot the time they will devote to each. They will be exempt, unless at their option, from examinations, and may obtain a certificate of attendance on this course of advanced study. On payment of the full fee for the course, they will have the privilege of attending any of the other exercises of the Medical School, the use of its laboratories and library, and all other rights accorded by the university.

Graduates of other medical schools may obtain the degree of M. D. at this university after a year's study in the graduates' course. The required examinations may be passed in such order as is desired, but only at the stated seasons. The fee for a year is $200; for one term $120.

The Commencement of the Medical School will occur in June, at Cambridge, in common with that of other departments of the university.

For further information or catalogues address the Secretary of the Faculty, Dr. R. H. Fitz, 108 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.

FACULTY.

Charles W. Eliot, LL. D., President.

Calvin Ellis, M. D., Jackson Professor of Clinical Medicine, Dean. John B. S. Jackson, M. D., Shattuck Professor of Morbid Anatomy, and Curator of the Anatomical Museum.

Oliver W. Holmes, M. D., Professor of Anatomy.

Henry J. Bigelow, M. D., Professor of Surgery.

John E. Tyler, M. D., Professor of Mental Diseases.

Charles E. Buckingham, M. D., Professor of Obstetrics and Medical Jurisprudence.

Francis Minot, M. D., Hersey Professor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine.

John P. Reynolds, M. D., Instructor in Obstetrics.

Henry W. Williams, M. D., Professor of Ophthalmology.
David W. Cheever, M. D., Professor of Clinical Surgery.
James C. White, M. D., Professor of Dermatology.
Robert T. Edes, M. D., Professor of Materia Medica.
Henry P. Bowditch, M. D., Professor of Physiology.

Charles B. Porter, M. D., Demonstrator of Anatomy, and Instructor in Surgery.

Frederic I. Knight, M. D., Instructor in Percussion, Auscultation, and Laryngoscopy.

J. Collins Warren, M. D., Instructor in Surgery.

Reginald H. Fitz, M. D., Assistant Professor of Pathological Anat

omy.

William L. Richardson, M. D., Instructor in Clinical Obstetrics. Thomas Dwight, M. D., Instructor in Histology.

Edward S. Wood, M. D., Professor of Chemistry.

H. H. A. Beach, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy.
William B. Hills, M. D., Instructor in Chemistry.

G. F. H. Markoe, Instructor in Materia Medica.
Frank W. Draper, M. D., Lecturer on Hygiene.

The following gentlemen will give special clinical instruction:

LECTURERS.

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

J. Orne Green, M. D., and Clarence J. Blake, M. D,. in Otology. W. H. Baker, M. D., in Diseases of Women.

Charles P. Putnam, M. D., and Joseph P. Oliver, M. D., in Diseases of Children.

Samuel G. Webber, M. D., and James J. Putnam, M. D., in Diseases of the Nervous System.

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Dental Department of Harvard University.

50 Allen Street, Boston, Mass.

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 practi

tioner.

Instruction in this school is given throughout the academic year, and extends over two years. The term commences on the Thursday following the last Wednesday in September, and ends on the last Wednesday in June. It is divided into equal terms, with a recess of one week between them. There is also a recess of one week at Christmas.

The following are the methods of study adopted in the various departments: —

Anatomy. Lectures, largely illustrated by the anatomical preparations and models of the Warren Museum, and by an extensive series of colored drawings and diagrams; various practical exercises, including dissection under the direction of the Demonstrator; recitations from text-books; histology.

Physiology. Lectures, recitations, and practical demonstrations in the laboratory. A new physiological laboratory has been fitted up, which is under the supervision of an able teacher, who devotes his whole time to this department.

Chemistry is taught mainly by practical work in the laboratory, each student having his own desk and apparatus. Besides the laboratory work, there is a lecture and a recitation every week.

Surgery. Lectures and recitations.

The surgical lec

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