The Dental Review, Volume 3

Front Cover
1883
 

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Page 386 - Edinburgh, the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, and the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow...
Page 391 - Examination for a First Class Certificate, or Second Class Certificate of First or Second Division, Algebra, Geometry, Latin, and a Modern Language, having been taken.
Page 387 - The commencement of the course of Professional Study recognised by any of the Qualifying Bodies, shall not be reckoned as dating earlier than fifteen days before the date of Registration.
Page 403 - Of having attended, at a recognised Hospital or Hospitals, the Practice of Medicine, and Clinical Lectures on Medicine, during one Winter and one Summer Session.
Page 139 - On the motion of the CHAIRMAN a vote of thanks was accorded to Mr.
Page 382 - To form some conception of the degree of coarse-grainedness indicated by this conclusion, imagine a rain drop, or a globe of glass as large as a pea, to be magnified up to the size of the earth, each constituent molecule being magnified in the same proportion. The magnified structure would be coarser grained than a heap of small shot, but probably less coarse grained than a heap of cricketballs.
Page 388 - Student unless he shall have previously passed a Preliminary Examination in the subjects of General Education as specified in the following list* : — 1. English Language, including Grammar and Composition.! 2.
Page 283 - Boston had about one sixth of its present population, and I suppose much less than a sixth of its present wealth. We were so circumstanced as to be peculiarly rivals. Our business led us across each other's paths every day for a long series of years. What one gained, the other seemed to lose. It would have been very easy for us to have got up a pretty quarrel at any moment; and having once begun, we might each have got partisans, and all the usual entanglements to such cases appertaining might have...
Page 413 - the observations, at present at our disposal, are not sufficiently numerous and varied to admit of the deduction of any general law, as regards the power by which absorption of one tissue by another is effected. But I think they point strongly to the idea, that a cell structure, in an active state of development, is capable of appropriating or removing out of its way a matured tissue.
Page 231 - We think our fathers fools, so wise we grow ; Our wiser sons no doubt will think us so.

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