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Collection

Charles Caldwell lectures, ca. 1825

262 pages

The Charles Caldwell lectures are manuscript notes taken by an observer of Caldwell's medical lectures - most likely in Lexington, Kentucky in 1825.

The manuscript lectures in this collection are unsigned, but are circumstantially attributed to Caldwell on the basis of internal references to a 30 year career in medicine, including an association with the Pennsylvania Hospital, to experience and research in pestilential epidemics, and to the author's "timely investigation of the sanguiniferous system." The manuscript probably represents a student's notes taken during a series of Caldwell's lectures in about 1825. They are not in Caldwell's hand.

The lecture series represented by this manuscript comprises an introductory course in medicine, covering nutrition, blood and the circulatory system, pathology, the nervous system, etc. Of particular interest are lectures on dreams, pleasure, memory and understanding, and differences between the sexes

Collection

Culinary Ephemera: Health Food, Circa 1920s-2002

1 Linear Foot (2 small manuscript boxes)

Forms part of the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive. This collection includes promotional materials addressing various aspects and concepts of healthy eating. Publications date from the 1920s-2002.

Forms part of the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive. This collection includes promotional materials addressing various aspects and concepts of healthy eating. Some of the topics addressed include dieting to lose weight, low-sodium diets, nutrition for children, food labels, and vegetarian cooking. Publications date from the 1920s-2002.

Collection

Department of Medicine and Surgery (University of Michigan) theses, 1851-1878

57 microfilms (1449 theses)

Theses written by University of Michigan Medical School students; subjects concern the theory and treatment of specific diseases, as well as the psychology of medicine, attitudes toward women and child rearing, the social standing of the physician, and medical practices during the mid-nineteenth century.