Slike strani
PDF
ePub

CHARLES CLIFFORD BARROWS, A.M., M.D., Clinical Instructor
in Gynæcology, Assistant Gynæcologist to Bellevue Hospital.
FOLLEN CABOT, JR., M.D., Clinical Instructor in Diseases of the
Genito-Urinary System.
COLEMAN WARD CUTLER, A.B., M.D., Clinical Instructor in
Ophthalmology, Assistant Surgeon to New York Eye Infirmary,
Attending Ophthalmic Surgeon to St. Luke's Hospital.

MARTIN JOHN ECHEVERRIA, M.D., Clinical Instructor in
Diseases of the Genito-Urinary System.

PATRICK HENRY FITZHUGH, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Orthopaedics, Assistant Surgeon to New York Orthopedic Dispensary and Hospital.

JOSEPH FRAENKEL, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Diseases of the Nervous System.

WILLIAM TRAVIS GIBB, B.S., M.D., Clinical Instructor in

Gynæcology.

ARCHIBALD EZEKIEL ISAACS, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Surgery.

THURSTON GILMAN LUSK, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Dermatology, Dermatologist to the Out-door Department of Roosevelt Hospital.

JAMES EDWARD NEWCOMB, A.B., M.D., Clinical Instructor in Laryngology, Attending Laryngologist to Demilt Dispensary, Assistant Physician (throat division) to Roosevelt Out-Patient Department.

WILLIAM SHANNON, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Diseases of Children.

FRANKLIN MOORE STEPHENS, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Otology.

GEORGE PEASLEE SHEARS, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Obstetrics, Assistant Attending Physician Mothers' and Babies' Hospital. GEORGE KNOWLES SWINBURNE, A.B., M.D., Clinical Instructor in Diseases of the Genito-Urinary System.

HENRY HOWARD WHITEHOUSE, Ph.B., M.D., Clinical Instructor in Dermatology, Assistant Surgeon to New York Skin and Cancer Hospital, Dermatologist to Demilt Dispensary. JOHN MCGAW WOODBURY, M.D., M.R.C.S., Instructor in Orthopædic Surgery.

Clinical Assistants.

ROBERT STAUNTON ADAMS, A.M., M.D., Clinical Assistant in Diseases of Children.

HENRY M. ARCHER, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Surgery.

RUSSELL BELLAMY, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Medicine and

Therapeutics.

WILLIAM BEDFORD BROWN, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Dermatology.

EARLE CONNOR, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Otology.

WILLIS SCOTT COOKE, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Diseases of

Children.

ROBERT MORRIS DALEY, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Diseases of the Nervous System.

GEORGE SLOAN DIXON, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Otology. WALTER ADAMS DUNCKEL, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Diseases of Children.

JOSEPH ALOYSIUS KENEFICK, M.D., Clinical Assistant in

Laryngology.

LOUIS JACOB JOSEF MUSKENS, M.D., Demonstrator of Pathology of the Nervous System.

LOUIS NEUMANN, M.D., Assistant in Physiology.

ROBERT GRIGG REESE, Ph.G., M.D., Clinical Assistant in Ophthalmology, Assistant Surgeon in New York Eye Infirmary. MAX G. SCHLAPP, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Diseases of the Nervous System.

GEORGE DE FOREST SMITH, M.D., Clinical Assistant in Mental Diseases.

WILLIAM FLETCHER STONE, Ph.B., M.D., Clinical Assistant in Surgery.

Staff of Instruction at Ithaca.

GEORGE CHAPMAN CALDWELL, B.S., Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry.

BURT GREEN WILDER, B.S., M.D., Professor of Physiology. EDWARD LEAMINGTON NICHOLS, B.S., Ph.D., Professor of Physics.

SIMON HENRY GAGE, B.S., Professor of Microscopy, Histology, and Embryology.

VERANUS ALVA MOORE, B.S., M.D., Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology.

WILLIAM RIDGELY ORNDORFF, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Organic Chemistry.

JOSEPH ELLIS TREVOR, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. PIERRE AUGUSTINE FISH, D.Sc., D.V.M., Assistant Professor of Comparative Physiology and Materia Medica.

BENJAMIN FREEMAN KINGSBURY, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Microscopy, Histology and Embryology.

LUZERNE COVILLE, B.S., M.D., Lecturer and Demonstrator in Anatomy.

- 1

PAUL RICHARD BROWN, M.D., Lecturer in Medicine, Surgery, Therapeutics, and Obstetrics.

EMILE MONIN CHAMOT, B.S., Ph.D., Instructor in Toxicological Chemistry.

THEODORE WHITTLESEY, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry.

RAYMOND CLINTON REED, Ph.B., Instructor in Pathology and Bacteriology.

HECTOR RUSSELL CARVETH, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. FLOYD ROBINS WRIGHT, A.B., Instructor in Bacteriology. CHARLES MELLIN MIX, A.B., Instructor in Anatomy.

AGNES MARY CLAYPOLE, Ph.D., Assistant in Microscopy, Histology and Embryology.

BURTON DORR MYERS, Ph.B., Assistant in Materia Medica. JOHN EDGAR TEEPLE, B.S., Assistant in Physiological Chemistry. WILLIAM FAIRFIELD MERCER, Ph.B., Assistant in Microscopy, Histology and Embryology.

EDITH JANE CLAYPOLE, Ph.B., M.S., Assistant in Physiology. SAMUEL HOWARD BURNETT, A.B., M.S., Assistant in Pathology. CHARLES F FLOCKEN, Assistant in Microscopy, Histology and and Embryology.

ROY MANDEVILLE VOSE, Assistant Demonstrator in Physiology.

Secretary to the Faculty-JOHN ROGERS, JR., A.B., Ph.B., M.D.
Clerk of the College-J. THORNE WILSON, 414 East 26th Street.

The Trustees have been enabled to carry out a long cherished wish by the receipt of a gift ample for the establishment and maintenance of a Medical Department of the University. A faculty has been appointed composed of men who have for years been prominent on the teaching staff of two other medical colleges of New York City, reinforced by a number of other physicians and surgeons who are connected with important hospitals, so that in the experience of its teachers and in its clinic facilities the new college is from the first unsurpassed. Upon this basis it is reasonable to expect that the expressed desire of the donor to elevate medical education and to found a medical college of the highest rank will be realized. Pending the completion of the new college buildings which are now in course of

construction, buildings have been secured temporarily which have long been used for medical instruction and are convenient in situation.

[ocr errors]

The full attendance in all four years of the course, due to the admission of large numbers of students hitherto in other medical schools, has made possible a complete organization of the College from the outset, with all the fullness and detail of instruction to be found in an old established institution. At the same time the opportunity has been seized of making some important and very desirable changes in prevailing methods of instruction, especially by increasing the amount of bedside teaching.

The standard of medical education has advanced so much in the past decade that a four year course has been prescribed by law for all medical schools in the state of New York. A preliminary college or university training in the liberal arts and sciences is generally recognized as of inestimable advantage. For the benefit of such it has been arranged that students in the Academic Department of Cornell University may elect in the Medical College certain studies, thereby shortening the time required for taking both the A.B. and M. D. degrees to six years. The last two years of the four year medical course must be spent in New York City. The great metropolitan hospitals and dispensaries alone can supply the amount of the varied forms of disease with which it is necessary, by his constant personal observation and contact, to make the student familiar.

The full four years course of the Medical College may be taken in New York, but under those conditions the only degree earned will be that of M.D. Women students must take the first half of the course in Ithaca (where a home is provided in the Sage College for Women) and the last half in New York.

ADMISSION TO THE COLLEGE.

For admission to the first year class at Ithaca communications should be addressed to the Registrar, Ithaca, N. Y.; at New York City, to the Secretary, 414 East 26th St., New York City. See below and pages 33-53.

For admission to advanced standing from other colleges and universities, communications should be addressed to the Secretary of the college, 414 East 26th St., New York City.

Requirements for Admission.

The laws of New York State require that each student before entering upon the medical course, must file with the executive officer of the faculty a Regents' medical student's certificate.

This certificate is granted by the Regents for 48 counts, as a result of Regents' examinations or on evidence of four years of satisfactory high school work or its equivalent. The credentials should be sent directly to the Regents' office, Albany, N. Y., and application made for a medical student's certificate.

No entrance examination other than that of the Regents is required. Full information may be obtained by addressing “ Examination Department, University of the State of New York, Albany," or "The Secretary of the Medical College in New York City."

(1) Admission to Advanced Standing in the First Year. Graduates of Cornell, Yale, Harvard, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, Johns Hopkins, Columbia, University of Michigan and other accredited universities, who have taken either a preparatory medical course or special work in organic and inorganic chemistry, physics, or physiology, will be allowed credit for the work which they have done and may be excused from the recitations upon these subjects, and from the exercises of the chemical laboratory in the first year, provided they pass examinations before the professors of these departments, and provided they give to dissection and advanced laboratory work, in various departments, a full equivalent in hours to the subjects they may have passed by examination. These examinations are held at the opening of the session.

Students who have had training in microscopical technique or in histology will be given advanced work in the histological laboratory, Students who have already attended courses in other medical colleges may be admitted to advanced standing in the four-years' course of the Cornell University Medical College under the following conditions:

(2) Admission to the Second Year.

Students from other accredited medical colleges desiring to enter the second year of the course must present certificates of attendance in laboratory courses of histology, chemistry, and materia medica corresponding in extent with those described on pages 220 to 222, or they must pass examinations in these branches. They must also show certificates of one year's work in dissection. There will be no other entrance examinations.

(3) Admission to the Third Year.

Students coming from other accredited medical colleges desiring to enter the third year must pass final examinations in the subjects of

« PrejšnjaNaprej »