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OHIO
285

CLEVELAND: Population, 522,475.

(4) Cleveland Homeopathic Medical College. Organized 1849. An independent institution.

Entrance requirement: A four-year high. school educatio.a or its equivalent.

Attendance: 46.

Teaching sta. ff': 61, of whom I0 are professors, 81 of otler grade. Resources available for maintenance: Fees, amounting tol i750. Laboratortddacilities: These comprise a good laboratory for physiology., in which vigorous teaching was in progress. In other subjects—chemistry, anatomy, pathology, and bacteriology the provision is only fair. Tlhere are several cases of old medical books in the office. Clinical facilities: These are limited to the City Hospital—a large institution three miles distant, in which one-fifth of the material is assignned to this school. Adjoining the school building is a homeopathic hospital,:.,With which the school was once intimately connected; they have now' drifted apart. Several rooms in the basement and on the first floor othe college building are used for a dispensary. Their equipment is poor; no comple or lasting records are kept. Date of it: .December, 1909. (5) WF_JTE RESERVE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL DEPARTMElq. Organized 1843; in 1881 joined Western Reserve University, of which it is nowlan organic part. Entrance reuqierement: Three years of college work. Attendance: 98, of whom 70 per cent are from Ohio. Teaching sta,.ff': 100, of whom 18 are professors, 8i of other grade. The laboratories are, with the exception of anatomy, manned with teaciders giving their entire time to the school.: Resources available for maintenance: The deportment ha endowments aggregating $784,865. Its income from fees is $11,000. Its budget!calls for $63,000. Laboratory facilitle.: Excellent laboratories, in which teabhing and research are both vigorously prosecuted, a provided for all the fundam'ntal scientific branches. A special endowment caies the department of experimental medicine. Books, museum, and other teaching accessories, all in abundancei are at hand. Clinical facilities: From the faculty of the school is app9inted the staff.of Lakeside Hospital, an endowed institution of 215 available beds thoroughly modern in construction and equipment. The school has ected a c!inical laboratory on the premises, so that close correlation f bedside and laboratory work is easily attainable. The relation of the two institutions has progressi'vely become more intimate,