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HAROLD BRUNN, M.D., Instructor in Surgery.

THEODORE C. BURNETT, M.D., Instructor in Physiology.

GEORGE E. EBRIGHT, M.D., Instructor in Medicine.

PHILIP KING BROWN, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Clinical Pathology.
SANFORD BLUM, A.B., M.S., M.D., Instructor in Pediatrics.

RAYMOND RUSs, B.S., M.D., Instructor in Surgery.

TRACY G. RUSSELL, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Surgery.

CARL S. G. NAGEL, M.D., Instructor in Ophthalmology.

HERBERT W. ALLEN, B.S., M.D., Instructor in Clinical Pathology.
WALTER SCOTT FRANKLIN, M.D., Instructor in Ophthalmology.

R. LEONA ASH, B.S., M.D., Instructor in Medicine.
WILLIAM G. MOORE, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology.
ANTONIO M. DAL PIAZ, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy.
RICHARD W. HARVEY, M.S., Instructor in Anatomy.
ADELEBERT W. LEE, M.D., Instructor in Pathology.

ALBERT J. HOUSTON, B.L., M.D., Instructor in Diseases of the Ear, Nose, and Throat.

ERNEST BRYANT HOAG, B.S., A.M., M.D., Lecturer in Public Hygiene.

HARRY P. ROBARTS, M.D., Assistant in Surgery.

JACOB SCHWARTZ, M.D., Assistant in Surgery.

MILTON B. LENNON, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Medicine.

LIONEL S. SCHMITT, B.S., M.D., Assistant in Diseases of the Skin.
HARRY E. ALDERSON, M.D., Assistant in Diseases of the Skin.
Wilfred F. BeeRMAN, Ph.G., M.D., Assistant in Medicine.
PAUL CASTELHUN, B.S., M.D., Assistant in Medicine.
GEORGE D. CULVER, M.D., Assistant in Diseases of the Skin.
EDGAR W. ALEXANDER, B.S., M.D., Assistant in Ophthalmology.
W. F. ALLEN, B.S., Collector and Assistant in Physiology.

DUDI EY TAIT, M.D., Assistant in Surgery.

RENÉ BINE, M.D., Assistant in Medicine.

JAMES LYMAN WHITNEY, M.D., Assistant in Medicine.

MARY E. BOTSFORD, M.D., Assistant in Surgery.

BENJAMIN THOMAS, M.D., Assistant in Diseases of the Ear, Nose, and

Throat.

CARL C. CRANE, M.D., Assistant in Orthopedic Surgery.
RUBY LACY CUNNINGHAM, B.S., Assistant in Anatomy.
IVAN C. HALL, A.B., M.S., Assistant in Bacteriology.

ADMISSION AND RESIDENCE.

ADMISSION.

Applicants for admission to the first year of the medical course and applicants for advanced standing must have completed at least two full years of preliminary training in the undergraduate departments of the University of California or of a university of equal standing. As evidence of this preliminary training, they must present a Junior Certificate of this University or its equivalent. The Medical Faculty recommends that students who anticipate entering the College of Medicine acquire a reading knowledge of French and German and include among the studies leading to the Junior Certificate courses in physics, chemistry, and zoology of the scope and character of the following courses: Physics 2A and 2B; Chemistry 1, 3, 8A, 8B, and 110A; Zoology 1 and 106.

THE COMBINED COURSE.

Students in the Colleges of Letters, Social Sciences, or Natural Sciences who have received the Junior Certificate and who, in addition to the work of the Junior Certificate, have completed a full year of work in the Upper Division, may, at the beginning of their fourth or senior year in the University, register as students in the College of Medicine and, upon completion of the first year in the College of Medicine, may receive the degree of A.B., B.L., or B.S. Students who enter the College of Medicine in accordance with the foregoing provision will be expected normally to have completed 94 units of University work in the academic departments, including such work in major courses as may be acceptable to the faculty of the college in which the student proposes to take his academic degree.

ADVANCED STANDING.

Students of recognized medical colleges are admitted to the secondyear, third-year and fourth-year classes only upon examination covering the subjects in which they seek to be accredited. They must first present evidence that they have satisfied the regular matriculation requirements and obtain from the Dean authorization for examination.

LOCATION.

The work of the first and second years of the medical course is conducted at Berkeley.

The main building of the Medical Department, located at the socalled "Affiliated Colleges in the western part of San Francisco, at Second and Parnassus avenues, south of Golden Gate Park, is devoted to the work of the third and fourth years.

BOARDING.

The expense of living in Berkeley and San Francisco is not great. Good board with room may be procured at the rate of twenty-five dollars per month at a convenient distance from the College buildings.

CLINICAL FACILITIES.

THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA HOSPITAL.

Through contributions made by charitable persons a hospital equip ment has been installed in the main building of the Medical Department at Second and Parnassus avenues, San Francisco. The hospital was opened April 11, 1907, and has been in active operation since.

On the second floor is a well-lighted operating room, with rooms annexed for anesthetizing, sterilizing, and X-ray apparatus. On this floor are two wards of sixteen beds each and one of twenty-eight beds devoted to medicine, surgery, and gynecology. On the floor above is a ward of ten beds devoted to obstetrical cases. Adjoining the ward are separate rooms for patients in the first and second stages of labor.

The hospital is designed for the care of the sick and for instruction and research in medicine. It is under the complete control of the Board of Regents of the University.

CITY AND COUNTY HOSPITAL OF SAN FRANCISCO.

The ward work and clinics held in the University Hospital are supplemented by similar courses given in the City and County Hospital. The medical schools in San Francisco are given practical control of the clinical material in the hospital, so that as far as purposes of instruction are concerned some of these wards are equivalent to a private hospital controlled by the department.

PRESIDIO MILITARY HOSPITAL.

Through the courtesy of the commanding officer of the medical department of the military post at the Presidio, students of the University

have access to the wards of this hospital, in which they may study medical and surgical cases under the direction of the medical service of the post.

Owing to the recent acquisition of the Hawaiian and Philippine Islands and the consequent establishment of a large garrison on the Government reservation in San Francisco, abundant opportunity for the study of the different phases of many tropical diseases is afforded.

OUT-PATIENT DEPARTMENT.

Instruction in ambulatory cases is given in the main building of the Medical Department in San Francisco.

THE SAN FRANCISCO MATERNITY.

Arrangements have been made with the Board of Directors of the San Francisco Maternity for instruction in practical obstetrics to members of the fourth-year class. Each student is detailed to the out-patient service for a period of two weeks, during which time he makes examinations of pregnant women; attends, with an interne, patients in labor and makes daily post-partum visits to the patient's home. Finally he examines women post-partum for discharge, reporting on the condition of both mother and baby. During the past year two hundred and twenty patients were treated at the institution.

HOSPITAL APPONITMENTS.

The position of interne in the University of California Hospital is open each year to five members of the graduating class who recommend themselves to the Faculty by their general fitness for the appointment. Internes serve for one year and have opportunities for obtaining experi ence in various fields of medicine and surgery. Interneships in the City and County Hospital also are awarded to two members of the graduating class upon the recommendation of the Faculty. Interneships in some of the private hospitals in San Francisco are filled annually either upon the recommendation of the College of Medicine or by competitive examina

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The fees are payable at the time of matriculation. Students may pay one-half of the tuition fee at the beginning of each term.

A key and breakage deposit of $25 is required for the use of lockers and to cover the cost of material used in the laboratories and damage to College buildings and equipment. At the close of the session the unexpended balance is returned to the student.

A rental of $5 a year is charged for the use of a microscope, and $2 for an immersion lens. Each student must provide himself with a microscope.

A rental of $2.50 is charged for the use of a set of bones and a deposit of $7.50 as security for their return in good condition.

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The library contains about 3,000 volumes, including many of the current text-books and some of the better monographs. Along certain lines the library is particularly good. It is the policy of the department to make the collections uniform and to obtain complete files of the most important periodicals published in English, French, and German. Among the journals in the library are the following:

American Journal of Medical Science, American Journal of Obstetrics, American Medicine, Anatomischer Anzeiger, Anatomische Hefte, Annals of Surgery, Archiv für Anatomie und Entwickelungsgeschichte, Archiv für Entwickelungsmechanik der Organismen, Archiv für Klinische Chirurgie, Archiv für Pathologische Anatomie und Physiologie, Archives of Surgery, Arbeiten aus dem Kaiserlichen Gesundheitsamte, Berliner Klinische Wochenschrift, Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, British Medical Journal. C'entralblatt für Bakteriologie und Parasitenkunde, Centralblatt für Chirurgie, Centralblatt für Gynecologie, Centralblatt für Klinische Medicin, Congrès Français de Chirurgie, Deutsche Medicinische Wochenschrift, Ergebnisse der Anatomie und Entwickelungsgeschichte, Fortschritte der Medicin, Jahrbücher der Gesammten Medicin, Jahresbericht der Gesammten Medicin, Jahresbericht über die Fortschritte der

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