volume twelve, number seventeen
IUPUI PROMOTIONS EFFECTIVE JULY 1 School of Dentistry:
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may 2, 1982
Instructor to Assistant Professor -- Wade B. Anshutz, James B. Carr, Stephen M. Farrar, Ben J. Fisher, Ronald L. Johnston, George A. Kopko, David N. Marks, Scott W. McDonald, Jeffrey L. Rhoades, David W. Riggs.
Associate Professor to Professor -- Jack D. Carr, Lawrence Goldblatt, Abdel H. Kafrawy, Leonard G. Koerber, Francis E. McCormick and Ray K. Maesaka.
School of Medicine:
Instructor to Assistant Professor -- Deborah I. Allen, Irving Cohen, Naomi S. Fineberg, Patrick L. Foley, James A. Fountain, Merle D. Hostetler, N. Harvey Himelstein, Robert M. Hurwitz, William B. Moores, Thomas J. Moretto and Harry C. Wolf.
Assistant Professor to Associate Professor -- Wallace M. Adye, Jr., William J. Anderson, Patrick W. Bankston, Glenn J. Bingle, Thomas A. Broadie, Marlene L.
Cohen, Mervyn D. Cohen, Michael D. Conroy, Howard J. Edenberg, Elaine S. Edmonds, William D. Gambill, Edward H. Goh, Howard R. Gray, James J. Heger, William L.
Hildebrand and Meredity T. Hull.
Also Robert B. Jones, Linda M. Kasper, Roland B. McGrath, Michael E. Mitchell, Glenn D. Moak, Rebecca E. Porter, Ram S. Ravindran, Howell W. Rogers, Ann Roman, Randall G. Rowland, James B. Steichen, R. Edward Stone, William R. Storer, Jerry L. Stucky, Oscar J. Viegas, Frederick J. Walker and Kathleen A. Warfel.
School of Nursing:
Instructor to Assistant Professor -- Christine Cookerly, Judy C. Miller and Marlene Roadruck.
Assistant Professor to Associate Professor -- Mary Jo Eoff, Anita J. Jarden and Betsy Ann Joyce.
Associate Professor to Professor -- Rosanne C. Perez.
School of Business:
Associate Professor to Professor -- Thomas P. Rustad
Herron School of Art:
Assistant Professor to Associate Professor -- Stanley Burford, Ian Fraser, Richard Nickolson, Jan Tenenbaum-Aguet and Phillip Tennant.
Associate Professor to Professor -- Margaret Fierke.
School of Law-Indianapolis:
Assistant Professor to Associate Professor -- W. William Hodes.
Associate Professor to Professor -- William Marsh.
School of Liberal Arts:
Assistant Professor to Associate Professor -- Sue Hammersmith and Gary Kreps.
Associate Professor to Professor -- John D. Barlow, Dominic J. Bisignano, Richard A. Fredland and Brian S. Vargus.
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ATHLETIC CLUB ORGANIZED
The IUPUI Metro Athletic Club has adopted a charter and has officers headed by Michael Carroll, president, and James Keckley, vice president. The club raises funds for athletic scholarships and is a booster organization for the athletic program. It plans a golf outing for this spring. For further information on the club and how you can be a member contact Athletic Director Mel Garland.
CAMP RILEY UNIQUE
Camp Riley at Bradford Woods, which was developed for the handicapped by the Riley Memorial Association, offers Hoosier boys and girls with physical limita- tions a chance to discover how much fun the outdoors can be. Physically handi- capped youngsters from Indianats 92 counties are invited to spend two challenging weeks in this unique setting. Projected cost per camper per session is $500, based on a maximum enrollment of 80 per session. Each camper is asked to pay $115 for his special Camp Riley experience plus a $25 registration fee. Some can; some can't. This is why outside support is important.
A gift of $360 would help to offset the difference between what campers are asked to pay and what it actually costs to send a child there. However, a gift in any amount is appreciated. Camp Riley has never sought nor received support from public agencies. It is sustained by camper fees, voluntary contributions and subsidies from the Riley Memorial Association. Gifts may be sent to the Riley Memorial Association, Suite 606, 11 S. Meridian Street, Indianapolis 46204.
FYI
The Campbell Soup Company has developed a Recreational Equipment Program modelled after the "Campbell's labels for Education program" to assist non-profit community organizations to secure recreational equipment. Interested persons should send the name of the community organization, officer, title, and address to: Campbell's Labels for Recreation, Consumer Referral, Box 4319, Monticello, Minn. 55365.
NEWS 'N' NOTES FROM HERE 'N' THERE
Reception Scheduled--Ruth Ladue, assistant professor in the Physical Therapy Program who is retiring after 17 years of service, will be honored with a reception to be given by the Division of Allied Health Sciences from 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday in Room 203 of Coleman Hall. Friends and associates are invited to attend. There will be a presentation at 3:30 p.m.
Pet Department--Home wanted for Dalmatian from a genetics experiment designed to lower the incidence of the defect in uric acid metabolism in the breed. Robert Schaible, ext. 3467 or 831-6936.
Assistant Bursar Moves to Cavanaugh--Barbara McQueen will move from the Bursar's Office in the University Services Building to the Student Activities Office, Room 322 of Cavanaugh Hall, where she will continue to handle student organization accounts.
This move will help improve the efficiency of handling student organization and Student Activity Fee funds.
Biophysical--"Characterization of a UV Resistant Mutant of CHO Cells with Normal Repair Ability," Biophysics Seminar by Dr. C. N. Newman, Battelle Pacific Northwest Laboratories; Monday (May 3), Room 205, Medical Science Building, 1 p.m.
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Advance Notice--Dr. Harvey C. Chong of Hilo, Hawaii, will present a seminar on dentistry in China from 12 to 1 p.m. May 18 in Room Sll6 of the School of Dentistry.
Sale--The Medical Bookstore in the Union Building has bargains in books on subjects ranging through most disciplines in the health fields. The books are in new condition and are publishers' overruns and old editions. The sale prices make it worth a trip to the Medical Bookstore.
Medical Library Summer Hours--Effective May 12 the summer schedule for the School of Medicine Library will be: Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. Friday and
Saturday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sunday, 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. Holiday schedules will be announced in the Green Sheet.
Check Cashing Reminder--The Check Cashing Office in the lobby of the Union Building will be open on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. beginning next Saturday (May 8).
Hours Monday through Friday are 8:15 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Check cashing at the Union Building Hotel/Information Desk will be discontinued. Checks are limited to $50 or less and must be written in increments of $5. A 25¢ service charge must be paid for each check. Identification required: Driver's license, a second item of identification, phone number, place of employment. Counter checks and two-party checks are not
accepted.
Continuing Education in Nursing--"Values Clarification in Cultural Diversity: Ethnic Influence on Health Beliefs and Practices", School of Nursing Department of
Continuing Education program for registered nurses, social workers, mental health personnel, professional health educators and allied health professionals, will be held at the Sheraton Inn, East, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. May 13 and 14. The
two-day workshop will be led by Dr. Sidney B. Simon, professor of Humanistic Education, University of Massachusetts, an internationally known author and lecturer on values clarification and personal growth. Opportunity will be provided for participants to explore personal values about health practices, responses to illness, and expectations for health and illness care from the perspective of their own ethnic background. For information call ext. 4650.
Positions Available--Otolaryngologist, academic position available July 1. Requirements include Board certification with additional training including one year minimum head
and neck surgery fellowship. Send resume to R. E. Lingeman, M.D., chairman, Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, I.U. School of Medicine, 1100 West Michigan
Street, Indianapolis 46223 . . . Epidemiology training, U.S. Public Health Service invites applications for a training program in medical epidemiology. Up to 12 persons per year who already have an M.D., a doctorate in an allied health profession, or Ph.D. in a biomedical or behavioral science may be accepted as service fellows of the USPHS for up to a three-year period of duty. Applications received by Sept. 10 may be considered for service to begin between July 1, and Sept. 1, 1983. To obtain program details and application forms, send a postcard with your printed name and home mailing address to: Robert S. Gordon, Jr., M.D., M.H.S., Chairman, Steering Committee,
National Institutes of Health, Building 1, Room 238, Bethesda, MD. 20205 . . .
Nursing faculty position in the Graduate Department of Pediatrics, Family, and Women's Health, available in August. Responsibilities include teaching and clinical super- vision of pediatric students. Master's degree will focus in Pediatric Nursing and post-graduate work required. Teaching experience and earned doctorate preferred.
Contact: Dean Helen Dorsch, I.U. School of Nursing, 1100 W. Michigan Street, Indianapolis 46223. Phone 264-8859.
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Bursar Office Closing--The Office of the Bursar will be closed from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, May 10 through Thursday, May 13 due to registration activities.
HONORS & ACCOLADES
Dr. Ned B. Hornback, professor and chairman of the Department of Radiation
Oncology at the I.U. School of Medicine, will be presented the Little Red Door's Recognition Award -- the organization's highest honor -- at its annual meeting Monday night at the Hyatt Regency. Dr. Hornback has served 12 years on the Little Red Door board of directors, including two terms as president and two as vice president.
Dr. John Mulcahy, associate professor of urology, I.U. School of Medicine, was one of four faculty members from various medical schools who made presentations at a three-day international conference April 2-4 in Houston to study advanced
surgical techniques involving the artificial urinary sphincter. More than 80 of the approximately 200 physicians throughout the world who are using the prosthesis to treat urinary incontinence attended the conference.
Robert G. Lehnen, professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs, will serve as vice-president of the Central Indiana Chapter of the American Statistical Association during the 1982-83 academic year.
Dr. Joseph T. Taylor, professor of sociology and special assistant to the I.U. vice president-Indianapolis, was presented the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., "Drum Major for Education" award by the Indiana Christian Leadership Conference and Black Expo at ceremonies held April 4.
Rowland A. Sherrill, associate professor oi religious studies, completed his term as president of the American Academy of Religion, Midwest Region, last month at the annual conference at Rockford, Ill. Also participating in the conference were E. Theodore Mullen, assistant professor of religious studies, and Jan Shipps, associate professor of religious studies.
Don Tiemeier, a senior Visual Communication student at the Herron School of Art won the National Poster/Graphics Contest for 1982, a contest sponsored annually by the President's Committee on Employment of the Handicapped. He received an all expense paid trip to Washington, D.C., to attend the annual meeting of the
Committee April 28-30 and receive a $1,000 cash scholarship. While there he was the guest of Jack Perlmutter, nationally known painter and printmaker. This is the 10th year for the contest in which Herron students have won prizes consistently.
David Wolf, a graduating senior at the I.U. School of Medicine who holds a B.S. degree in electrical engineering from Purdue University, is the recipient of the 1982 Karl R. Ruddell Scholarship award presented annually by the Winona Memorial Foundation.
The $1,000 award is given to an individual whose pursuit of excellence in the
medical or paramedical professions deserves both recognition and financial support.
*News Bureau
Indiana University- Purdue University at Indianapolis
355 Lansing Street
Indianapolis, Indiana 46202
(MATT-720118)
JEANNETTE MATTHEW
LIBRARIAN, SCHOOL OF LIBERAL ARTS 420 BLAKE STREET