cient in a technical sense, as meaning
all-sufficient to produce the given effect, without the intervention of
any other cause.
[38] "Menorrhagic chlorosis" of Trousseau.
[39] For it is known that vaso-motor paralysis is not of itself
sufficient to induce haemorrhage, unless the tension of the blood-current
be coincidently raised. See Bouchard, _Pathogenie des Haemorrhagies_.
[40] The "uterine epistaxis" of malignant fevers are evidently foreign
to our subject, as also the haemorrhages of subinvolution, or of the
menopause. The haemorrhages from anemia are, on the other hand, so
frequent, as to explain the majority of such cases as Dr. Clarke's.
[41] Meadows observes: "It is not the ovary which is an appendix to the
uterus, but the uterus which is an appendix to the ovary."
[42] Corpora quadrigemina.
[43] Corpora striata.
[44] Thalami optici and corpora striata.
[45] Hereditary disease, dependent on an imperfect development of blood
vessels, and characterized by a remarkable tendency to bleed from any
blood-vessel that accident may have opened. This disease is nearly
confined to men, but the women in the same families often suffer from
profuse menstruation.
[46] For we purposely leave out of sight innumerable facts in regard to
its influence on nutrition, temperature, etc.
[47] Quoted by Welcker, _Untersuchungen ueber den Wachsthuum und Bau des
Menschlichen Schaedels_. Halle, 1862.
[48] Lucas. Traite de l'heredite.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN.
"Recognizing the equality of both sexes to the highest educational
advantages," for four years the doors of the University of Michigan have
been "open to all students."
"The University is organized in three departments, as follows: the
Department of Literature, Science, and the Arts; the Department of
Medicine and Surgery; the Department of Law. Each department has its
Faculty of Instruction, who are charged with its special management."
Eager to avail themselves of the advantages here offered in such a
"broad, generous, and hospitable spirit," a number of women from
different parts of the country have matriculated, and are or have been
pursuing studies in common with students of the other sex.
During the four years three women have graduated from the Literary
Department, four from the Law, and twenty-one from the Medical. At the
present time there are in the first department above mentioned, fifty
women; in the second, five; and in the third
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