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CHARLES H. STOCKTON, LL.D.............Acting President of the UNIVERSITY DAVID E. BUCKINGHAM, V.M.D..... Dean, Professor of Materia Medica,

CHARLES E. MUNROE, Ph.D...
SHEPHERD IVORY FRANZ, Ph.D..
JOHN LOCKWOOD, D.V.S..
JOHN P. TURNER, V.M.D..

ROBERT J. FORMAD, V.M.D..

Therapeutics, and Canine Practice

. Professor of Chemistry .Professor of Physiology

Professor of Veterinary Surgery

.Professor of Theory and Practice of
Veterinary Medicine

. Professor of Comparative Histology

ADOLPH EICHHORN, D.V.S....... Professor of Contagious Diseases and

ALBERT H. HASSEL, M.R.C.V.S..

and Pathology

Sanitary Science

Professor of Veterinary Zoology

and Parasitology

F. F. RUSSELL, M.D., Major U. S. Army, Director Army Medical School,

T. M. PRICE, M.S., Ph.D..
GEORGE H. HART, V.M.D..

Professor of Bacteriology and Pathology ...Professor of Physiological Chemistry Assistant Professor of Sanitary Science and National Quarantine

BENJAMIN T. WOODWARD, V.M.D... Assistant Professor of Zootechnics, Milk Hygiene, and Dairy Inspection Assistant Professor of Veterinary Anatomy

ROSSLYN J. STAFFORD, D.V.M.......

HULBERT YOUNG, V.M.D... Assistant Professor of Veterinary Obstetrics and Lecturer on Horseshoeing WILLIAM W. BRIDE, A.B., LL.B... Lecturer on Veterinary Jurisprudence HERBERT S. WILLIAMS, V.M.D.. Lecturer on Military Veterinary Science JACOB TRAUM, D.V.M..... Demonstrator of Histology and Embryology TAYLOR O. TIMBERLAKE, Ph.G..... Demonstrator of Veterinary Materia Medica and Pharmacy

JOHN M. BUCK, D.V.M..........Demonstrator of Veterinary Anatomy WILLIAM P. COLLINS, D.V.S... Instructor in Clinical Veterinary Surgery E. H. INGERSOLL.

Assistant in Physiological Chemistry

REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION.

Students presenting a diploma from any recognized college, normal or high school, or a teacher's certificate, are eligible to admission without examination.

Students not having the above qualifications will be required to pass an examination in the common-school branches ordinarily required by the U. S. Civil Service Commission.

ADMISSION OF STUDENTS FROM OTHER SCHOOLS.

Students of other recognized and approved veterinary schools may be admitted to this school as follows:

Those qualified to enter the second year of their own school may be admitted to the second-year class of this school; those qualified to enter the third year of their own school to the third year of this schoo1. Provided, however, that the subjects pursued by the applicants in their previous year or years are reasonably equivalent to those required in the same year or years in this school, and that the requirements for advancement from class to class are the equivalent of those in this school. Applicants may be required to submit to examination in all the subjects pursued by the previous class of this school.

ADVANCED STANDING.

Advanced standing will be given for degrees in Medicine, Dentistry, Veterinary Medicine, or Pharmacy.

Students holding degrees in Arts, Science, Philosophy, or Agriculture, who in the course of study for their degrees have pursued studies in chemistry, physiology, anatomy, histology, bacteriology, or pathology, equivalent to the courses in these subjects in this school, may upon satisfactory evidence of their proficiency be credited with such studies. Provided, however, that such students shall devote two years' study in veterinary medicine, the last year of which is passed in this College.

SPECIAL STUDENTS.

Students, approved by the Dean, not candidates for the degree of Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, may be admitted without examination to pursue any course they may elect. Such courses cannot, however, be subsequently considered as time spent in the course for the degree of Doctor of Veterinary Medicine. Nor can such students enter upon the regular veterinary course without complying with all the regular requirements for admission.

CLASSIFICATION OF STUDENTS.

Students are divided into three classes, according to their proficiency and the time spent, viz., first year, second year, and third year. Students cannot advance to a higher class with more than one major and one minor condition. Students failing in any subject or subjects may be permitted at the next examination period a reëxamination in the subjects in which they fail. The Faculty may dismiss any student from the school, if in its judgment such student be deemed an unsuitable person, intellectually or otherwise, for the profession of veterinary medicine.

ORDER OF INSTRUCTION.

The subjects studied in each year are shown in the following table:

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For lecture, laboratory and dissecting hours a schedule card is furnished.

Examinations are held at the end of each course. Clinical work in the veterinary and canine hospitals connected with the College and at abattoirs and stock and dairy farms is required of second and third year students.

ANATOMY.

Professor of Veterinary Anatomy ...Demonstrator of Anatomy

ROSSLYN J. STAFFORD, D.V.M..
JOHN M. BUCK, D.V.M....

The instruction in Anatomy is given in a series of lectures, demonstrations, recitations, and laboratory work, the latter being the most important.

The lectures are intended to present the general anatomical features of the horse and other domestic animals, and to point out the anatomical relations of the organs and parts of the body most subject to surgical operations.

The horse is used as the type subject in dissection, and every student is required to dissect all the parts of the horse, and such other of the domesticated animals, including the ox, sheep, swine, dog, and cat, as may prove most expedient.

The laboratory is well supplied with all of the parts of the skeleton of the horse, and portions of the skeleton of various other domestic animals, for the work in osteology. Ample material is always available for the dissection of joints, muscles, viscera, and the vascular and nervous systems. The laboratory is also provided with a complete model of the horse, showing the relation of all the organs and parts of the body, for demonstrations in general and surgical anatomy. The course is completed in the first year.

TEXT-BOOK: Chauveau's Comparative Anatomy of the Domesticated Animals.

HISTOLOGY AND EMBRYOLOGY.

ROBERT J. FORMAD, V.M.D., M.D........Professor of Comparative Histology and Embryology JACOB TRAUM, D.V.M......Demonstrator of Histology and Embryology

These subjects are taught by a series of carefully correlated lectures, recitations, quizzes, and demonstrations, occupying five hours each week during the first half of the year, and will include such instruction in microscopy as a working knowledge of the use of the simple and compound microscope and accessories, supplemented by the fundamental laws of optics; the method of preparing tissues for microscopic examination, and the technique of mounting.

Comparative histology will deal with the minute structure of the tissues and organs of various animals, including man. In addition to the microscopical demonstrations, lantern demonstrations will also be given.

Embryology under this head will present the salient features of the anatomy and physiology of the fecundated ovule up to the time of birth. TEXT-BOOK: Histology, Böhm, Davidoff & Huber.

PHYSIOLOGY.

SHEPHERD IVORY FRANZ, Ph.D......

...

. Professor of Physiology

The course in Physiology consists of lectures, demonstrations, and laboratory exercises. The lectures cover all the important facts and theories regarding bodily functions of the animal, and are illustrated by diagrams, models, and prepared specimens.

In the laboratory each student performs a number of experiments on blood, on the circulation, on digestion, on the general functions of nerves and muscles, and on the special senses of animals.

Special emphasis is laid on the relation of normal physiological functions to the disturbances of function in disease and upon the physiological action of drugs.

It is intended in this way to bring the work of the Physiological Laboratory and other exercises into closer relation with the succeeding course in Pathology, Therapeutics, and General Veterinary Medicine. TEXT-BOOKS: Howell's Physiology, Smith's Veterinary Physiology.

CHEMISTRY.

(First Year.)

General Chemistry.-A series of illustrated lectures, accompanied by recitations and exercises, on theoretical, inorganic, organic, and technical Chemistry. The student is required to take notes on these lectures, which he must submit for examination. Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, at 4.50. Professor MUNROE and Mr. SWETT.

Laboratory Practice.-A laboratory course for the study of the principles of chemistry which is designed to instruct students in the methods of conducting chemical experiments. Tuesdays and Thursdays, at 1.30 or 7. Professor MUNROE and Assistant Professor HILL. TEXT-BOOKS: Holland's Medical Chemistry and Toxicology.

PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY.

(Second Year.)

T. M. PRICE, M.S., Ph.D..

E. H. INGERSOLL.

Professor of Physiological Chemistry ...Assistant

This course will consist of lectures and laboratory instruction, and includes the study of water from a sanitary standpoint; the chemical examination of milk, the tissues and fluids of the body; the isolation of the digestive enzymes, and a study of their action in vitro.

MATERIA MEDICA AND THERAPEUTICS.

DAVID E. BUCKINGHAM, V.M.D.

TAYLOR O. TIMBERLAKE, Ph.G.......

. Professor of Veterinary Materia Medica and Therapeutics

Demonstrator of Veterinary Materia Medica and Pharmacy

First year. (1) Lectures upon and demonstrations of drugs and their preparations and doses used in veterinary practice will be followed

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