A SKETCH OP EDUCATION IN SOUTH CAROLINA. 507 



EXPENSES. 



Medical Department. — Matriculation fee, $5 ; Laboratory, expenses for 

 first course students, $5 ; Entire course of lectures, including Demonstra- 

 tor's ticket, and hospital advantages, $75 ; Graduating fee, $30. 



Pharmaceutical Department. — Matriculation fee, $5 ; Tuition fee, $30 ; 

 Practical laboratory work, $10 to $15 ; Graduating fee, $10. 



THE REQUIREMENTS FOR MEDICAL GRADUATION ARE, 



1st. The applicant must be twenty-one years of age, and have had a pre- 

 liminary education satisfactory to the Faculty. 



2d. He must file a satisfactory certificate of having studied medicine for 

 at least tJiree years under a regular graduate or licentiate and practitioner 

 of medicine, in good standing. 



3d. He must have attended two full courses of lectures at a medical 

 school approved by the Faculty, the last of which has been in this Insti- 

 tution. (No school will be admitted upon the ad eundem list that ar- 

 ranges its course of instruction to graduate students in less than the 

 time prescribed by this College). 



4th. His examination on all the branches, attendance upon lectures, 

 habits and general character must be satisfactory to the Faculty. 



The Faculty will give a prize to the candidate for medical graduation 

 who passes the best examination. 



Professor R. A. Kinloch, for the best report of his Clinical Lectures on 

 Surgery. 



Professor F. L. Parker, for the best report of his Clinical Lectures on 

 Disease of the Eye and Ear. 



Professor C. U. Shepard, Jr., to the first-class student who passes the 

 best examination upon Practical Chemistry. 



The term begins on the 15th October, and closes during the first week 

 in March. The average attendance is between eighty and a hundred. 



The gra'duating class of 18S3 numbers thirty. Further information 

 may be obtained from Dr. J. Ford Prioleau, Dean of the Faculty. 



VIII. MILITARY TRAINING AND INSTRUCTION. 



The people of South Carolina in early colonial days and during the 

 revolution became thoroughly enured to the hardships and hazards of 

 war. The exploits of Marion and Sumter, and their companions, were a 



