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Equity.

SENIOR YEAR.

Professor TAYLOR.

Keener's Cases on Equity Jurisdiction.

References: Story on Equity Jurisprudence; Pomeroy on Equity

Jurisprudence.

2 hrs., throughout the year.

Evidence.

Thayer's Cases on Evidence.

Professor HENGSTLER.

References: Stephen's Digest on the Law of Evidence; Taylor on Evidence; Greenleaf on Evidence.

2 hrs., throughout the year.

Constitutional Law.

Thayer's Cases on Constitutional Law.

Professor HENGSTLER.

References: Pomeroy's Constitutional Law; Cooley's Constitutional Limitations; Cooley's Principles of Constitutional Law.

2 hrs., throughout the year.

Pleading and Practice.

Assistant Professor MCMURRAY.

Cases on Pleading, Ames; Langdell's Equity Pleading, second edition; Bliss on Code Pleading, third edition; the Code of Civil Procedure of California; selected cases from the California Reports.

References: Stephen on Pleading, Williston's edition; Pomeroy's Code Remedies, fourth edition.

3 hrs., throughout the year.

Admiralty.

Ames's Cases in Admiralty.

1 hr., throughout the year.

Assistant Professor DEN MAN.

MOOT COURT.

A Moot Court is established as a regular mode of instruction. Attendance is made compulsory upon the members of the Senior Class. At the beginning of the college year a calendar of cases to be argued, with counsel assigned, together with the judge who is to sit in the case, is prepared, and the proceedings are governed according to rules established by the Dean. A member of the Faculty is present at each session of the Court and makes such criticism as is necessary, after the student judge has delivered his written opinion.

LIBRARY.

There is no library connected with the College, but students are permitted to use the San Francisco Law Library, at the City Hall, on the same terms as members of the bar.

PRIVILEGES OF GRADUATION.

Students who complete the prescribed courses receive the degree of Bachelor of Laws, and are admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of the State, on motion, without examination.

EXPENSES.
FEES.

Tuition is free, but a fee of $10 per year is charged to cover incidental expenses.

BOARD AND LODGING.

Good board, with room, at a convenient distance from the lec ture rooms may be procured at the rate of $5 a week and upward.

COLLEGE OF MEDICINE.

FACULTY.

BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER, President of the University, President.

ARNOLD A. D'ANCONA, Dean.

ROBERT A. MCLEAN, Professor of Clinical and Operative Surgery, Emeritus.

GEORGE H. POWERS, Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology.

WILLIAM W. KERR, Professor of Clinical Medicine.

DOUGLASS W. MONTGOMERY, Professor of Dermatology.

JOHN M. WILLIAMSON, Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery.

HARRY M. SHERMAN, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Surgery.

ALONZO E. TAYLOR, Professor of Pathology.

CHARLES A. VON HOFFMANN, Professor of Gynecology.

HERBERT C. MOFFITT, Professor of the Principles and Practice of

Medicine.

JOSEPH M. FLINT, Professor of Anatomy.

WILLIAM B. LEWITT, Professor of Pediatrics.

JACQUES LOEB, Professor of Physiology.

THOMAS W. HUNTINGTON, Professor of Clinical Surgery.

LEO NEWMARK, Professor of Clinical Neurology.

FRANKLIN T. GREEN, Associate Professor of Physiological Chemistry.

*MARTIN H. FISCHER, Assistant Professor of Physiology.

IRVING HARDESTY, Assistant Professor of Anatomy.

JOHN BRUCE MACCALLUM, Assistant Professor of Physiology.

BEVERLY MACMONAGLE, Lecturer on Gynecology.

CHARLES L. MORGAN, Lecturer on Materia Medica.

J. HENRY BARBAT, Instructor in Surgery.

SAMUEL J. HUNKIN, Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery.

*Resigned December 31, 1904.

From January 1, 1905.

RICHARD M. H. BERNDT, Instructor in Therapeutics.

HENRY A. L. RYFKOGEL, Instructor in Pathology.

HAROLD BRUNN, Instructor in Surgery.

CLARENCE QUINAN, Instructor in Medicine.

GEORGE E. EBRIGHT, Instructor in Medicine.

ALBERT B. MCKEE, Instructor in Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology.

PHILIP K. BROWN, Instructor in Clinical Pathology.

WALLACE I. TERRY, Instructor in Surgery.

HENRY B. A. KUGELER, Instructor in Surgery.

ALFRED B. SPALDING, Instructor in Obstetrics.

GARDNER P. POND, Instructor in Otology, Laryngology and Rhinology.

SANFORD BLUM, Instructor in Pediatrics.

ROBERT O. MOODY, Assistant in Anatomy.
FRED G. BURROWS, Assistant in Medicine.
CHARLES M. COOPER, Assistant in Medicine.
ALFRED NEWMAN, Assistant in Surgery.
CHARLES G. LEVISON, Assistant in Surgery.

JOHN C. SPENCER, Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery.
CECIL M. ARMISTEAD, Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery.
GEORGE H. RICHARDSON, Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery.

GEORGE W. MERRITT, Assistant in Ophthalmology.

HOWARD MORROW, Assistant in Dermatology.

CHESTER H. WOOLSEY, Assistant in Medicine.

LEWIS S. MACE, Assistant in Surgery.

TRACY G. RUSSELL, Assistant in Surgery.

WILLIAM G. MOORE, Assistant in Gynecology.

EMMETT L. WEMPLE, Jr., Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery.
CARL S. G. NAGLE, Assistant in Ophthalmology.

JAMES T. WAKINS, Assistant in Orthopedic Surgery.
HERBERT W. ALLEN, Assistant in Clinical Pathology.
ANNA M. FLYNN, Assistant in Ophthalmology.
LEWIS W. ALLEN, Assistant in Surgery.

LOCATION.

The College of Medicine is located in the western part of San Francisco, at Second and Parnassus Avenues, south of Golden Gate

Park. The main building has a frontage of 148 and a depth of 208 feet. Upon the ground floor are the students' lockers, the photographic and projection rooms, the anatomical preparation room, the laboratory of materia medica, storage rooms, janitors' quarters and lavatories. Situated upon the second floor are the offices of administration, the library, the students' room, the laboratory of physiology, the laboratory of chemical pathology and the private laboratories of pathology. The laboratories of chemical physiology, histology, morphological pathology and bacteriology and a lecture room are upon the third floor, while the fourth contains eight dissecting rooms, the bone room, the anatomical museum and model collection, the private laboratories of anatomy and a lecture room.

REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION.

Beginning with the academic year 1905-06 applicants desiring to enter the first year of the medical course, and all new students seeking advanced standing, must present evidence of having completed at least two full years of preliminary training in the undergraduate department of a college or university of recognized standing. The requirements for admission to the two years' academic work are given under Group IId, page 52 of this REGISTER. Further qualifications in modern languages are very desirable before the student enters upon the preliminary college work required of all applicants for admission to the College of Medicine. Satisfactory evidence must also be presented that during these two years the applicant has completed courses of the following values:

Chemistry. (1) A course in general inorganic chemistry, including lectures, recitations and laboratory work. Lectures and recitations, two or three hours; laboratory work, five or six hours a week, throughout one year. In this course should be included the main facts of physical chemistry.

(2) Quantitative analysis. Gravimetric and Laboratory nine hours a week, one half-year.

volumetric.

(3) Organic Chemistry. A course of lectures, demonstrations and recitations in organic chemistry. Two hours a week, one halfyear.

Courses 1, 3, 5A and 8A in the Department of Chemistry in the University of California cover the work outlined above, which constitutes the minimum required amount of chemistry.

Physics. (1) A course in Elementary Physics, including lectures, recitations and laboratory work. Six hours a week throughout one year.

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