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lin P. Mall, Charles S. Minot and George A. Piersol. Baltimore. Vol. 1+:

Journal of Comparative Neurology. C. J. Herrich and Yerkes. Granville, O. Vol. 1+.

Journal of Physiology. Ed. by M. Foster and J. N. Langley. Cambridge. Vol. 1+.

Journal, American, of Physiology. Ed. by American Physiological Society. Boston. Vol. 1+.

Proceedings of the Association of American Anatomists. History, Constitution, Membership and the Titles, Abstracts and Papers from 1888 to 1901. Sessions 1-14.

Schmidt's Jahrbücher der in- und ausländischen gesammten Medicin. Lpzg. Jahrg. 1890.

Skandinavisches Archiv f. Physiologie. Tigerstedt. Vol. 1+ Zeitschrift für Biologie. Buhl, M. v. Pettenkofer, Radlkofer u. Voit. Münich. Vol. 1-30. 1865-94.

Zeitschrift für Hygiene u. Infektionskrankheiten. R. Koch u. C. Flügge. Lpzg. Band 11+.

Zeitschrift für physiologische Chemie. Hoppe-Seyler u. A. Kossel. Strassb. Vol. 1+.

Zeitschrift für Psychologie und Physiologie der Sinnesorgane Hrsg. H. Ebbinghaus u. A. König. Hamb. u. Lpzg. Vol. 1-6. Zeitschrift für wissenschaftliche Microscopie. Hrsg. von W. J. Behrens. Band 1-21 u. Reg. Braunschw. u. Lpzg. 18841904.

Zentralblatt für Normale u. Pathologische Anatomie mit Einschluss der Mikrotechnik. Hrsgb. R. Krause u. M. Mosse Bd. 1. Berlin, Wien. 1904.

In addition to the purely scientific journals the library possesses files of the American, English, German and French medical journals. Among the more complete sets are the following:

Alienist and Neurologist, American Journal of the Medical Sciences, American Journal of Neurology, American Medicine, Annals of Surgery, Berliner Klinische Wochenschrift, Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Braithwait's Retrospect, British

Medical and Surgical Journal, Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Courier of Medicine, Medical Times, New York Medical Journal, Prager Vierteljahr Schrift, University of Pennsylvania Medical Bulletin, Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift, Deutsche Zeitschrift f. Nervenheilkunde, Index Medicus, Interstate Medical Journal, Journal of the American Medical Association, Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases, Lancet, Medical News, Medical Record.

REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION.

Candidates for admission to the Medical Department will be received upon the following conditions:

1. A satisfactory certificate of good moral standing.

2. Admission by Diploma. Any candidate who has received a degree in Arts or Science from a College or University recognized by this department, will be admitted without examination.

Diplomas of Public High Schools, Academies, with a four years' course, also of State Normal Schools having a course equivalent to a four years' High School course, are accepted as complete certificates. Diplomas must be presented by candidates to the Registrar on the date of matriculation.

Any candidate who shall present written evidence of having passed the entrance examinations of a recognized College or University, in which the requirements are equivalent to those demanded for entrance to this department, will be admitted without examination.

3. Admission by Examination. Candidates for admission to the first year class of the Medical Department, who do not possess the foregoing qualifications, will be required to pass examinations in the following subjects:

English, 3 units.

Mathematics, 3 units.

Latin, 2 units.

Physics, 1 unit.

History, 1 unit.

In addition to these subjects, the candidate must present himself for examination in five units, which he may choose from the following:

English, 1 unit.

Mathematics, 1 unit.

Latin, 1 unit.

Greek, 2 units.

German, 2 units.

French, 2 units.

Chemistry, 1 unit.

Botany, 1 unit.

Zoology, 1 unit.

A unit means one year's (eight months') work of not less than four forty-minute periods each week. In the following statement, which is intended as a guide for the applicant in preparing himself for entrance, each unit is indicated by a numeral at the beginning of a paragraph.

A student may be allowed to enter upon his medical work conditioned in not more than three units, and these conditions must be removed by satisfactory examination before he is allowed to enter the second year of his medical course.

ENGLISH.

No candidate will be accepted in English whose work is notably defective in spelling and punctuation.

1.

2.

Grammar.

Rhetoric and Composition.-A short essay, correct in spelling, punctuation, grammar and division of paragraphs, written on a subject to be announced at the time of the examination.

3. The candidate must present evidence of a general knowledge of the following works and their authors: Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice; Pope's Homer's Iliad (four books); Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield; Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner; Tennyson's The Princess; Scott's Ivanhoe; Lowell's The Vision of Sir Launfal; Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans. The candidate must present evidence of a special knowledge, form and structure of the following works: Shakespeare's Macbeth; Milton's Lycidas, Comus, L'Allegro and Il Penseroso; Burke's Speech on Conciliation with America; Macaulay's Essays on Milton and Addison.

4.

1 and 2.

3.

4.

5.

MATHEMATICS.

Algebra, including reduction of fractions, solution af simple equations with one, and with two or more unknowns, involution and evolution, the Theory of Radicals and Quadratic Equations. Olney's complete School Algebra or some equivalent text. Geometry, Plane, with exercises (as in Wells, Wentworth or Phillips and Fisher).

Geometry, Solid, with numerical exercises (as above).

Trigonometry, Plane. (Wells, Wentworth, Phillips and Strong).

LATIN.

Grammar and Composition. (1) Inflection and derivation of words. Syntax, with writing simple Latin prose.

1.

2.

Cæsar:

3.

Latin prose translation will be based on Cæsar's Gallic Wars.
Books I., II., III., IV.

Cicero:

Any six orations and a passage to be read at sight.

4. Virgil. The first six books of the Æneid.

GREEK.

1.

2.

3.

Grammar and Composition. Xenophon's Anabasis, Books I. and II., will be the basis of this examination, which will consist of the common forms and construction, and simple sentences turned into Greek or English.

Xenophon. The first four books of the Anabasis.

Homer. Iliad, Books I. and II. with questions on forms and construction.

HISTORY.

1.

2.

1.

2.

United States History. Fiske or equivalent.

English History, or Greek History, or Roman History (Meyers).

GERMAN.

Grammar. The declension of nouns, articles, adjectives, pronouns; conjugation of strong and weak verbs. The test will consist in part by direct grammatical questions, and in part of translation of simple English into German.

Literature. Translation at sight of easy German Prose selected from three representative nineteenth century writers.

FRENCH.

1. Grammar. The conjugation of regular verbs and of the more frequently occurring irregular verbs; forms and positions of the various pronouns and adjectives, inflections of nouns and adjectives. This will be tested by the translation into French of a short connected passage.

2.

Literature. Sight translation, and ability to render into good
English a passage of nineteenth century prose.

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