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3. The examination for the Diploma shall be held in March and June each year.

4. The fee for admission to the examination for the Diploma in Tropical Hygiene shall be £5 5s., and for each subsequent examination £3 3s.

5. The fee on admission to the Diploma in Tropical Hygiene shall be £1.

DIPLOMA IN MEDICAL RADIOLOGY AND

ELECTROLOGY

ORDINANCE L

The University shall grant a Diploma in Medical Radiology and Electrology [D.M.R.Ê.], which shall be awarded in pursuance of a resolution of the Senate.

REGULATIONS

1. Candidates, before admission to the examination for the Diploma in Medical Radiology and Electrology, shall be required to furnish certificates of (a) possession of a registrable qualification approved by the University in Medicine and Surgery; (b) attendance on courses of instruction approved by the University in the following subjects :

(a) Physics: Lectures

Lectures and Laboratory work-two half days a week-Two terms.

(b) (i) Radiology and (ii) Electrology, during six months in the X-ray and Electro-therapeutic Departments of a Hospital or Hospitals.

2. The subjects of the examination for the Diploma shall be :

A. Physics.

B. Radiology and Electrology.

Candidates may take Parts A and B separately.

As the numbers in each course of tuition will be limited, candidates must make early application for admission to Mr. C. Thurstan Holland, D.L., Ch.M., F.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., 43 Rodney Street, Liverpool.

3. The examination for the Diploma shall be held in March each year.

4. The fee on admission to the examination for the Diploma in Medical Radiology and Electrology shall be £5 5s., and for each subsequent examination £3 3s. If Parts A and B are taken separately, the fee for examination in each part shall be £3 3s.

5. The fee on admission to the Diploma in Medical Radiology and Electrology shall be £1.

THE CLINICAL SCHOOL

BOARD OF CLINICAL STUDIES

K. W. MONSARRAT, M.B., C.M., F.R.C.S.E., Chairman. J. C. MATTHEWS, M.C., M.A., M.D., F.R.C.P., 61 Rodney Street, Secretary

THE DEAN OF THE FACULTY OF MEDICINE.

T. R. W. ARMOUR, M.B., Ch.B., F.R.C.S.
J. MURRAY BLIGH, M.D., M.R.C.P.

R. C. DUN, B.Sc., C.M., F.R.C.S.

MARY H. FRANCES IVENS, Ch.B., M.B., M.S.

Professor R. E. KELLY, C.B., M.D., B.Sc., F.R.C.S. P. W. LEATHART, B.A., M.B., B.C.

R. W. MACKENNA, M.A., M.D., B.Ch.

H. LEITH MURRAY, M.D.

J. H. MATHER, M.B., Ch.B., B.Sc., D.M.R.E.
J. H. WILLETT, M.D., Ch.B.

H. F. WOOLFENDEN, M.D, F.R.C.S.

The clinical teaching of Medicine, Surgery, and the Special Subjects, is conducted in four General Hospitals and five Special Hospitals which together form the Clinical School of the University.

The Hospitals are :-The Royal Infirmary, the David Lewis Northern Hospital, the Royal Southern Hospital, the Stanley Hospital, Royal Liverpool Children's Hospital, the Hospital for Women, including the Samaritan Hospital, the Eye and Ear Infirmary, St. Paul's Eye Hospital, and Liverpool Maternity Hospital.

The teaching in these institutions is under the administration of the Board of Clinical Studies which

carries out the clinical curriculum in accordance with the Ordinances and Regulations of the University. The Hospitals contain a total of 1,445 beds; 910 of these are in the General Hospitals, 535 in the Special Hospitals. In this large number of beds the School possesses a field for clinical instruction which is unrivalled in extent in the United Kingdom, and the fact that the whole of the teaching in the hospitals is under one management ensures the employment of these extensive facilities to the best advantage.

The University is thus able to afford to students and practitioners of medicine a medical education as complete in all branches as can be obtained in any other Medical School. All the hospitals are within easy access from the University. In each institution clinical teaching has been conducted for many years.

CLINICAL CURRICULUM

Students commence hospital practice at the beginning of the Lent Term in the third year of their medical course. The following is the clinical curriculum recommended to those who propose to take the degrees of M.B., Ch.B.

Third Year.-Lent Term-Medical Clerking or Surgical Dressing, Clinical Lectures (Medical and Surgical).

Summer Term.-Medical Clerking or Surgical Dressing, Clinical Lectures (Medical and Surgical).

Fourth Year.-Autumn and Lent Terms.-Medical Clerking or Surgical Dressing, Post-mortem Examinations and Clerkship, Anaesthetics, Clinical Lectures (Medical and Surgical).

Summer Term.--Gynecological Clerking. Clinical Lectures (Medical and Surgical), Special Subjects, Ward Demonstrations.

Fifth Year. Clinical Lectures (Medical and Surgical). Special Subjects, Revision Classes, Ward Demonstrations (Medical and Surgical), Casualty Dressing.

Students who are not preparing for the degree follow a slightly different course. The Secretary gives instruction concerning the best course to follow in each individual case.

There are numerous resident appointments open to graduates after passing the Final examination for the degree. These appointments are made on the recommendation of the Medical Boards of the Hospitals. They are sufficiently numerous to ensure that all graduates who pass their examinations with distinction have the opportunity of obtaining further valuable experience in the practise of their profession.

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