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All such lists shall be published in such manner as is before provided with respect to the Examinations for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts.

10. A list of the names of those who have satisfied the Examiners shall be made in a book to be kept for the purpose, and shall be signed by the Examiners. This book shall, after the close of the Examination, be placed in the custody of the Assistant Registrar, and any question thereafter arising with respect to the result of any Examination shall be determined by reference to such book.

§ 5. Of the admission of Bachelors of Medicine to the Degree of Doctor of Medicine.

1. Any person who has been admitted to the Degree of Bachelor of Medicine may supplicate for the Degree of Doctor of Medicine, provided that he has entered upon the thirty-ninth Term from his Matriculation and that his name has been on the Books of some College or Hall or on the Register of Non-Collegiate Students for twenty-six Terms, and that he has written a dissertation approved as hereinafter provided. Every such dissertation shall be on a subject connected with the Science or Practice of Medicine, and must include the History and Literature of the subject treated of.

2. The dissertation shall be delivered to the Regius Professor of Medicine, and shall be submitted by him to and be subject to the approval of those Professors of the Faculty and Examiners for the Degree of Bachelor of Medicine for the time being whose special subjects are dealt with in it.

3. The dissertation shall, if the Regius Professor of Medicine so direct, be publicly read on a day appointed by him.

4. A Candidate for the Degree of Doctor of Medicine may offer as his dissertation a work already printed or published if written by him since taking his degree of Bachelor of Medicine, and if such printing and publication shall have taken place within the two years immediately preceding.

5. Every person admitted to a degree in Medicine or in Surgery shall be entitled on his admission to receive from the Registrar a formal Certificate in attestation of such degree.

VII. OF DEGREES IN SURGERY.

[Statt. Tit. VI. Sect. VII.]

§ 1. Of the Sub-Faculty of Surgery.

The Faculty of Medicine shall include within it a SubFaculty of Surgery.

§ 2. Of the Degree of Bachelor of Surgery.

Every person admitted to the Degree of Bachelor of Medicine shall ipso facto be admitted also to the Degree of Bachelor of Surgery.

§ 3. Of the Degree of Master of Surgery.

1. Any Bachelor of Surgery may supplicate for the Degree of Master of Surgery in the twenty-seventh Term from his Matriculation, provided that he has passed the Examination hereinafter prescribed, and has had his name on the books of some College or Hall or on the Register of the Non-Collegiate Students for twenty-six Terms.

2. The subjects of the Examination shall be the practice of Surgery, Surgical Anatomy, Surgical Pathology, and Surgical Operations.

3. The Board of the Faculty of Medicine shall exercise a general control over the conduct of the Examination, and shall have power to issue such notices and to make such further regulations as it shall deem necessary for carrying out the provisions of the Statutes relating thereto.

4. The Examination shall be held once in every year in Trinity Term after the completion of the Second Examination for the Degree of Bachelor of Medicine, and shall begin on a day and hour and at a place to be fixed by the Regius Professor of Medicine, subject to the approval of the ViceChancellor. Not less than seven days' notice shall be given of the time and place so fixed.

5. The Examination shall be conducted by the Regius Professor of Medicine, together with the two Examiners appointed to examine in Surgery for the Degree of Bachelor of Medicine; provided that in case of the absence of the Regius Professor the Vice-Chancellor may appoint some other Professor in the Faculty to act as his deputy.

6. No Candidate shall be admitted to Examination unless he shall have forwarded his name and a Certificate signed by some officer of or some person deputed by the College or Hall or Body to which he belongs, and showing that his name is on the books of such College or Hall or Body, together with the fee of £5, so as to reach the Assistant Registrar not less than fourteen days before the first day of the week in which the Examination is to be held. Every Candidate who is not already a member of the Surgical Staff of a recognized Hospital shall at the same time produce a Certificate of having acted in such a Hospital as Dresser or House-Surgeon for six

months. Every such Certificate shall be countersigned by the Regius Professor of Medicine.

7. No Candidate shall be admitted to the Examination unless he shall have passed in all the subjects of the Second Examination for the Degree of Bachelor of Medicine. It shall be the duty of the Examiners to ascertain that this condition has been satisfied.

8. At the close of the Examination the Examiners shall make and sign lists of the Candidates who have satisfied them. The following shall be the form of the list :

Nomina Candidatorum qui [die mensis et anni] pro gradu Magistri in Chirurgia prout Statuta requirunt examinati satisfecerunt nobis examinatoribus.

A. B. e Coll.

C. D. ex Aul.
E. F., Prof. Reg.

Ita testamur) G. H.

Examinatores.

I. K.

The list shall be published in such manner as is before provided with respect to the Examinations for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts.

9. A list of the names of those who have satisfied the Examiners shall be made in a book to be kept for the purpose, and shall be signed by the Examiners. This book shall after the close of the Examination be placed in the custody of the Registrar of the University, and any question thereafter arising with respect to the result of the Examination shall be determined by reference to such book.

10. Every Master of Surgery being otherwise duly quali fied shall be entitled without further payment of fees to supplicate for the Degree of Master of Arts.

(ii) Regulations of the Board of the Faculty.

1. First Examination for the Degrees of B.M. and B.Ch.

I. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY.

The Examination will occupy two periods of three hours each; one to be devoted to paper work, the other to practical work and oral Examination.

1. The Written Examination.

(1) The elementary facts relating to the molecular structure (including structural and stereo isomerism), classification, and chemical relationships of the following:

Aliphatic Compounds.

The simpler hydrocarbons and their halogen derivatives.

The simpler monohydric and polyhydric alcohols.

The amines.

The simpler aldehydes and ketones (including chloral).

The simpler monobasic and dibasic acids and their hydroxyderivatives.

Esters and salts of the above alcohols and acids (including fats); acylation and hydrolysis. Acid chlorides, anhydrides, and

amides. Urea and its relations to Uric Acid.

The simpler nitriles.

Carbohydrates: glucose and fructose; the glucoside salicin.
The amino acids as related to the proteins.

Aromatic Compounds.

Benzene, its halogen and nitro-derivatives, its amines, phenols, sulphonic acid, and quinone.

Toluene and its derivatives, benzyl chloride, benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, benzoic and salicylic acids, benzoyl chloride.

Pyridine.

(2) The reactions and chemical properties of the substances referred to in the syllabus for the Practical Examination (see below), and the methods of preparation of the substances referred to in cl. (1) of that syllabus.

2. The Practical Examination.

The Candidate will be expected to have a practical acquaintance with the following methods and reactions, so as to be able to explain to the Examiner the operations involved in their performance, and, if called upon, to perform the operations, or certain stages of them, himself.

(1) The preparation of the following compounds :

Ethyl-chloride, ethylene-dibromide, aldehyde, and ether, from alcohol;
Ethyl-benzoate, from alcohol and benzoic acid;

Nitro-benzene, di-nitro-benzene, and aniline, from benzene;
Quinine sulphate, from cinchona bark.

(2) The estimation of nitrogen in organic substances by combustion and by Kjeldahl's method.

(3) Demonstration of the principal reactions of the following compounds,

but not their identification:

Hydrocyanic acid, and simple metallic cyanides; Alcohol; Acetaldehyde; Chloral hydrate; Acetone; Formic and Acetic acids; Urea; Phenol; Aniline; Salicylic acid; Quinine; Morphine; Strychnine. (4) The crystallization of an organic substance; the purification and determination of the melting-point of a substance such as di-nitrobenzene; the determination of the boiling-point of substances such as ethyl-chloride, ether, and aniline; the process of fractional distillation; the process of steam distillation as exemplified in the preparation of such a substance as aniline; the processes of esterification and saponification as exemplified in the formation and decomposition of such a substance as ethyl-benzoate.

II. HUMAN ANATOMY.

The Examination in Human Anatomy will occupy two periods of three hours each, one to be occupied in paper work, the other in practical work and oral examination.

The subject of the Examination will be Human Anatomy: this will include such parts of comparative osteology as are requisite for the illustration of points of structure, and the principles of craniometry, the general histology of the various tissues and organs, the anatomy of the placenta and embryonic membranes, human embryonic development. It is not intended that Candidates should be examined further in these subjects than to the extent to which they are treated of in the standard English text-books of Human Anatomy.

The written part of the Examination will consist of one paper of six questions, five only of which may be answered.

The Practical Examination will be conducted by means of parts already dissected, and may include actual dissection. The Candidates will be required to give evidence of their knowledge by demonstrations upon the living subject of the exact positions of the principal viscera and other structural features which are of especial importance surgically or medically. III. HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY.

The Examination will occupy three periods of three hours each, one to be assigned to paper work, the other two to practical work. The written part of the Examination will consist of one paper of seven questions, five only of which may be answered.

The subjects of examination on paper will be

1. The physiology of the Blood, of Circulation, Respiration, Secretion and Excretion, Digestion and Absorption; Exchange of material and Nutrition; production and discharge of Heat, and maintenance of normal Temperature in the Body.

2. The influence of the Nervous System on each of the above-named functions.

3. The elementary physiology of Muscle and Nerve.

4. The general action of Muscles on the Skeleton.

5. The physiology of the Larynx: elementary facts relating to Voice and Speech.

6. The physiological anatomy of the Brain and Spinal Cord, and the localization of Function in these organs.

7. The physiology of common and special Sensation, and the physiological anatomy of the Sense Organs.

8. The physiology and physiological anatomy of the Testis, Ovary, and Uterus, and of the external Organs of Generation; the physiology of Impregnation, Pregnancy and Parturition.

9. The circulation, respiration and nutrition of the Embryo.

10. The physiological properties of Atropine, Muscarine, Physostigmine, Veratrine, Curara, Pilocarpine, Strychnia, Morphia, Chloroform.

Questions will be set in Histology relating to one or more of the above subjects.

In the Practical Examination Candidates will be required to give evidence of their knowledge

1. By making microscopical preparations of normal tissues either fresh or previously prepared, so as to demonstrate their structure.

2. By performing or explaining viva voce any of the manipulations in common use in Histology.

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