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PRIVILEGES OF GRADUATES.

Graduates of this College, and students holding certificates of attendance upon lectures, are credited for the full time of their medical studies by the Royal College of Surgeons of England, the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, and the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow.

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Fee for the second course of lectures..

No fee is required for the third course of lectures. Graduation fee.

$5.00

10.00

130 00

130 00

40.00

Students who have already attended two full courses of lectures in any other regular school, and graduates of any such school, are admitted to the full course of lectures of such session (not including practical anatomy) on payment of the matriculation fee and $65.

Graduates of other regular schools of three years' standing at the end of a given session are admitted to all the didactic and clinical lectures of such session on payment of the matriculation fee only.

Board and Lodging.

The expense of living in San Francisco is not great. Good board, with room, at a convenient distance from the College building, may be procured at the rate of $5 a week. Students from a distance may learn the addresses of these boarding houses, and other like information, by calling on the Dean of the Faculty, Dr. R. A. McLean, 603 Merchant Street, corner of Montgomery.

STUDENTS, 1892.
(See Catalogue of Students.)

COLLEGE OF DENTISTRY.

FACULTY.

MARTIN KELLOGG, A.M., President of the University, PRESIDENT.

L. L. DUNBAR, DEAN, and Professor of Operative Dentistry and Dental Histology.

JOSEPH LE CONTE, Honorary Professor of Biology.

C. L. GODDARD, Professor of Orthodontia and Dental Metallurgy.

MAURICE J. SULLIVAN, Professor of Dental Pathology and Therapeutics.
W. E. TAYLOR, Professor of the Principles and Practice of Surgery.

A. L. LENGFELD, Professor of Materia Medica and Medical Chemistry.
WILLIAM B. LEWITT, Professor of Anatomy.

A. A. D'ANCONA, Professor of Physiology.

LECTURERS, DEMONSTRATORS, AND ASSISTANTS.

W. XAVIER SUDDUTH, Special Lecturer on Histology and Pathology. HARRY P. CARLTON, Lecturer on Operative Dentistry and Demonstrator of Operative Technic.

H. N. WINTON, Lecturer on Chemistry.

M. F. GABBS, Demonstrator of Continuous Gum Work.

J. T. ROWAND, Demonstrator of Crown and Bridge Work.

JOHN H. BARBAT, Demonstrator of Anatomy.

CHARLES BOXTON, Lecturer on Mechanical Dentistry and Demonstrator of Mechanical Technic.

EDWARD N. SHORT, Demonstrator of Operative Dentistry.

F. J. LANE, Demonstrator of Operative Dentistry.

C. E. POST, Demonstrator of Mechanical Dentistry.

S. A. HACKETT, Demonstrator of Mechanical Dentistry.

HAROLD L. SEAGER, Demonstrator of Mechanical Dentistry.

JOSEPH D. HODGEN, Superintendent of Infirmary and Assistant in Metallurgy.

O. W. JONES, Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy.

H. D. NOBLE, Demonstrator of Orthodontia Technic.

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In compliance with a recommendation from the Medical Faculty of the University, submitted May 28, 1881, the Board of Regents, by act of September 7, 1881, organized the College of Dentistry as an integral part of the University of California.

The College was given accommodations in the Medical Hall of the University, and through the generous offer of the Medical Faculty, provision was made for lecture and clinic room. Beginning with the session of 1891, the College will occupy spacious quarters of its own in the new building at the corner of Market and Taylor Streets, San Francisco.

The progress of dentistry in recent times has given it rank among the liberal professions, and the permanent establishment of the College of Dentistry provides, at the least expense to candidates on the Pacific Coast, the needed preparation for the responsibilities of its practice.

CALENDAR AND DIRECTORY.

The matriculation examination for the session of 1892 93 will be held May 30, 1892.

The session of 1892-93 begins June 6, 1892, and closes February 28, 1893. The session of 1893-94 begins Monday, September 4, 1893.

There is a vacation of two or three weeks during the winter.

The next Commencement, for conferring the Degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery, will be held March 9, 1893, in San Francisco.

The Didactic Lectures and Dental Clinics are held in the College building, 18 Taylor Street, San Francisco.

The Medical and Surgical Clinics are held at the City and County Hospital, Twenty-second Street and Potrero Avenue, San Francisco.

The office of the Dean is at 500 Sutter Street, San Francisco.

REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION.

Every applicant for admission must be eighteen years of age, and must present to the Faculty satisfactory evidence of good moral character.

Unless a matriculate of one of the Colleges of the University of California, or of some other recognized college or university, or a graduate of some recog

nized academy or high school, or a holder of a teacher's certificate, the applicant will be required to pass an examination in (1) arithmetic, (2) geography, (3) English grammar and composition, (4) United States history, (5) physics, (6) elementary chemistry, (7) Latin grammar of pharmacy and medicine.

For admission to the Senior class, there will be an examination in anatomy, physiology, chemistry, histology, operative dentistry, and mechanical dentistry.

COURSES OF INSTRUCTION.

The following Courses are prescribed to all candidates for the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery:

1. Principles and Practice of Operative Dentistry and Dental Histology. Intra-uterine and extra-uterine development of the teeth and maxillæ, both temporary and permanent, with a consideration of the histological elements of the tissues whence the teeth are developed. Chemical and physical properties of the teeth. Dental anatomy, topographical, histological, and comparative. Technology of the teeth and the nomenclature of their surfaces. Methods of extracting the teeth; ancient and modern instruments compared; casualties liable to result, and the best means of meeting the exigencies of each case. Diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of dental caries. Demonstrations in the use of instruments for the mechanical and surgical treatment of diseases of the teeth. Dental hygiene, ethics, and jurisprudence. Seventy lectures; Mondays and Fridays, at 5 P. M. Professor DUNBAR and Dr. CARLTON.

2. Mechanical Dentistry: Lectures. Junior Course. Treatment of the mouth and teeth preparatory to inserting artificial dentures; impressions in wax and plaster; casts; the manufacture of artificial teeth, their selection and arrangement for special cases; application of atmospheric pressure to artificial dentures; properties and uses, in the construction of dentures, of wax, plaster, shellac, sandarach, rubber, and celluloid.

Senior Course. Lectures on the construction of instruments, of dies and counter-dies, of models of the mouth, and of molds; construction of dentures on bases of gold, silver, and aluminum; continuous gum work. Each student is required to deposit in the Museum specimens of artificial dentures constructed by himself in the dental laboratory. Seventy lectures; Tuesdays and Thursdays, at 4 P. M. Dr. BOXTON.

3. Operative Dentistry: Clinics. Patients applying for treatment of the teeth or associate parts, or for operations upon them, are assigned to students in turn, who, with the assistance of Demonstrators, are required to perform all the different operations of filling and extracting teeth, to treat mechanically, surgically, and therapeutically the various diseases of the teeth, and to learn the use of the various appliances and materials employed in such operations. Seventy clinics; Wednesdays and Fridays, from 9 A. M. to 11 A. M.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 9 A. M. to 12 M., and 2 to 4 P. M. Drs. CARLTON,

LANE, and SHORT.

4. Mechanical Dentistry: Clinics. Patients applying for artificial dentures are assigned to the students in turn, who, with the assistance of Demonstrators, are required to perform all the operations preparatory to and in completion of the construction of artificial dentures. This work affords practical exercise in the management of patients, in the selection of suitable materials for different cases, in working plaster, wax, molding-sands, zinc, lead, silver, and aluminum, in alloying and refining gold, and in making continuous-gum dentures on platinum. Each Freshman and Junior student is required to construct a number of dentures in rubber or celluloid; and each Senior a sufficient number on metallic bases to establish his ability to use the metals for this purpose. Seventy clinics; Mondays and Fridays, from 12 M. to 4 P. M.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 12 M. to 3 P. M. Drs. HACKETT, POST, and SEAGER.

5. Dental Pathology and Therapeutics: Lectures. General Pathology, in which are discussed the general aspects and causes of disease, its symptoms, diagnosis, prognosis, the pathology of anaesthetics, etc. Special Pathology, in which a critical examination is made into the special cause of dental decay, as manifested in the various diseases peculiar to the teeth and mouth. Neuralgia and other nervous affections receive such attention as their importance demands. Thirty-five lectures, Tuesdays, at 5 P. M.; and thirty-five clinics, Mondays, at 9 A. M. Professor SULLIVAN,

6. Orthodontia and Dental Metallurgy. The correction of irregularities of the natural teeth, as well as the causes, will be treated at length and illustrated by means of drawings and numerous casts of practical cases. Much more attention is paid to this subject by the profession than formerly, and an endeavor will be made to keep the classes posted in regard to all new and valuable methods.

The instruction in Dental Metallurgy, including the properties and uses of gold, silver, platinum, aluminum, zinc, lead, tin, and their alloys, and of iron and steel, will be made more complete than heretofore. Special attention will be paid to refining and alloying gold, and to estimating its fineness. Practical laboratory instruction will be given in working of the metals, and each student will be required to conduct all the usual operations in dental metallurgy, as well as to make experiments in new compounds and alloys. Considerable attention will be paid to the analysis and compounding of amalgam alloys. Thirty-five lectures and demonstrations; seventy hours; Wednesdays, from 4 to 6 P. M. Professor GODDARD and Dr. HODGEN.

7. Histology and Pathology. A special Course of ten or fifteen lectures on Embryology and Pathology, embracing a comparative study of blood corpuscles. The lectures on Embryology will be illustrated by a full series of the developing chicks and other embryos, showing the development of the blastoderm and products of the epiblast, including the development of the skin, mucous membrane, hair, nails, horns, and the enamel organ. The products of the mesoblast, including the development of bone, dentine, and cement; also a comparative study of the development of the teeth; and a comparative study of their anatomy. The lectures on pathology will embrace the following subjects: Lesions of the dental pulp, including tissues developed

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