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voll.DTie three, number eighteen april 29, 1973

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RESOLVED . . . .

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The Indiana General AssemQj}" ent art of its last da in session assin a resolution honori11g_J;>.r_._ Mayna,r-9 K. Hhle-"on the occasion of his retirement" and the completion of

"nea:rJy _ _tJn:e~_ decades _of_. service to the _citizens of the State of Indiana." The resolution praised Dr. Hine for his service as dean of the Indiana University School of Dentistry, as president of the American Dental Association and other national and international

societies, and as first chancellor of Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis.

Dr. Hine has announced his plans to retire as chancellor on June 30, under I.U. policies which require retirement from administrative positions at age 65.

* * *

NEW HORIZONS AT RILEY

"N.~_.Pir~c.tions_for the New Riley" was the theme of Dr. Morris Green's address last week _at_the __ 52nd annual meeting of the Riley Memorial Association. Dr. Green, physician-in-chief at the hospital, announced plans for the development of a Renal Transplant Center for

Children. and the formation of the Institute for Research into the Problems of Children ..

The Renal Transplant Center, under the direction of Dr. James D. Northway, associate professor of pediatrics, will start out as a four-bed unit. (The Riley liver transplant team and the previously announced liver transplant program are under the direction of Dr. Joseph F.

Fitzgerald, associate professor of pediatrics. He and his associates are developing a laboratory and working to prepare the program for its first human transplant by 1975.) According to present thinking, Dr. Green explained, the Institute for Research into the Problems of Children will be a consortium of major research laboratories: Laboratories for Biomedical Research, Laboratories for Child Development, Research in Children's Surgery, Health Services Research and Child Welfare Research.

"That they may have life and have it abundantly" wi 11 continue to be the creed for the Riley Hospital staff, said Dr. Green, as the hospital moves into its second half-century of

service to Indiana's children.

* * *

SUMMER Is COMING

Wan.!._~ pleasan~_yaca~ion away from the hustle of the city? And stay on University s~il?

Try Ca.m..P. Brosius, Wisconsin, the camp is open to families and as a summer camp for children, and is managed by the Normal College of IUPUI.

George Dickiso~rmal College faculty, is camp director for this season which runs from June 24 through August 5. Rates are $11 or $14 per person a day, including all meals except Sunday nights, depending on accommodations. Weekly rates are $85 or $90. Children under 10 go for half the regular rates.

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Included at Brosius is a rustic hotel, cottage and cabin facilities for 70 guests, and swimming, diving, skiing, sailing, rowing, canoeing, fishing, or just sunning. Two golf courses, a stable, a go-kart track are a few minutes from Brosius.

More information is available from Dickison, 264-3764. But make arrangements before May 14 when the summer school for Normal College students begins at Brosius.

* * *

CALENDAR CHECK-OFF

Pharmacy displays this week in University Hospital will be Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp. on Monday and W.B. Saunders Co. on Wednesday. Purdue Frederick Co. will have a display in Riley on Friday. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

:;x

Tune In -- The IUPUI Magazine visits Dr. Edwin L. Gr:sh'am, director of the Newborn Special Care Unit at Riley Hospital, this week. Listen to WIAN-FM (90.1) Monday at 3:30 p.m. and Wednesday at 4:30 p.m.

Monday H "Chemical Modification s-tudies of Chloroplast Structure and Function," Biochemistry Faculty Seminar by Richard A. Dili ey, Ph.D. from Purdue University; Medical Science Building, Room 326, 4 p.m. (3:45 coffee)

Special Program -- Miriam Z. Langsam, assistant professor of history, has prepared a multi-J

media presentation on American Art and Music from 1550 to 1972. It will be shown Monday from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. in Room 101 of the Lecture Hall Building.

Tuesday --

"Re ~evelopments

in Cystic Fibrosis Research," Medical Genetics Seminar by Dr. John A. Mangos, professor of pediatrics at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine; Riley Research, Room 139, 4 p.m.

Wednesday -- 1vfntestinal Vascular Response to Changes in Venous Pressure," Physiology Semfnar by Bruce Johrts:· graduate student; Medical Science Building, Room 205, 4 p.m.

Faculty Meeting -- The Academic Graduate Faculty of IUPUI will meet at 3 p.m. Friday in the Union Building. Agenda includes a report of the Academic Graduate Council, structure for graduate programs at IUPUI anQ1centralization of graduate student services.

Seminar -- Dr. Joseph Borzerieca, professor and director of the State Department of

Toxicology, Virginia Commonwealth University of Richmond, will present a seminar at noon on Monday (May 7) on the "Salivary Route of Drug Elimination" in Room 321 of the Medical

Science Building.

* * *

NEWS 'N' NOTES FROM HERE 'N' THERE

First Edition -- Genesis a new ublication featurin and oet IUPUI students, has made its debut on campus. Edited by M. Anne Wilcox and Dinah Rockwell, the anthology is published by the English and Philosophy clubs and features 52 pages of original IUPUI writing.

Help! Forty student ushers are needed for the IUPUI Commencement on May 20. You will be paid for your services. Call or see Mrs. Helen Zapp in the Union Building, Ext. 8265.

Dial Right -- IUPUI people calling the LaRue Carter Hospital switchboard should remember to dial 634-8401. Dr. George T. Gifford in biochemistry has the Centrex number 8401 and is getting many calls from people who really want Carter.

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Mini Course at Mini Price -- An "Exploring Careers" mini-course, a non-credit, five-week course at two hours a week and costing only $1, is designed for all IUPUI students who want help in picking a career. The course will start the week of May 14. For more information, call Mary Hyne, Cavanaugh Hall, Room 303, Ext. 3988.

Living Space -- A visiting assistant professor (young woman), who'll be here May through August, needs to share or ~let an apartment or house. Call Dr. Doris Merritt, Ext. 8287.

Goof -- Lillian Gatling stikes, assistant professor of nursing, should have been listed in the April 8 Green Sheet as one of the authors of Adult and Child Care -- A Client Approach to Nursing.

House for Rent -- A 3-bedroom, air-conditioned, furnished house on northwest side will be available for renting for a two-month period during June, July and early August; $150 plus utilities per month. Call 293-3545 or 923-1321, Ext. 211.

* * * TRAVELLERS

Chicago was the destination la month for Chancellor Maynard¥: Hine, Vice-Chancellor John C. BuHher and Jack M. Ry'a°er, and Associate Dean James E~ They attended a meeting of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Dr. Hine also was in Washington, D.C., last month for a meeting of the Periodontal Diseases Advisory Committee of the Natio~ Institute for Dental Research. He is chairman of the committee.

James B.

Dro'(g~

director of the Indianapolis Bail Project at the Indianapolis Law School, attended the national conference of Pre-Trial Service Agencies recently in Washington, D.C. He moderated a panel discussion on "Standards of Success Measurement, Data to be Considered and Their Effects on Program Criteria." At the meeting, a National Association of Pre-Trial Service Agencies was formed and Droege was elected vice-president and a

member of the board of directors. Also last month, Droege, under the sponsorship of the Center for Judicial Education at the Indianapolis Law School, conducted four workshops on

"Bail Alternatives" for trial judges in the state. Materials used in the workshop included the 56-page "Manual of Procedures for Bail and Pre-Trial Services" prepared by Droege and published by the Center for Judicial Education. This month Droege was in Phoenix, Arizona, to conduct a workshop on pre-trial release at the National Conference of Trial Court

Administrators. A resolution adopted by the association endorsed the principles of bail reform recommended by the American Bar Association's Minimum Standards for the Administration of Criminal Justice and urged court administrators to implement pre-trial service programs in their courts.

. v

Richard A. Fredland, assistant professor of political science, was in New York City last / month for the annual meeting of the International Studies Association. He presented a

paper on the "Organization of A~n Unity."

Associate Professor Paul J. Galanti of the Indianapolis Law School was the featured speaker at the Third Annual Wabash Valley Purchasing Management Association Seminar last month in Terre Haute. He spoke on the "Liability of Purchasers for Inducing Price Discriminations under the Federal Robinson-Patman Act: "

/

.

Dental Speakers: Dr. William G. Shafer, chairman and di~guished professor of oral . pathology, was a guest...lecturer last month in meetings ~onsored by the Marathon County Dental Society in Wausa~ Wisconsin • . . Dr. Melvin R. Lund, chairman and professor of

operative dentistry >vhas returned from a meeting of the Greater Philadelphia Dental Society . . Dr. Varouj an A. Chalian, chairman and professor of maxi llofacial prosthetics, recently

Jn:esent~<i a, pap_~:r ,_at _the University of AlabaJ!la School of Dentis~ry in Bi_!ID~_n.~ham.

(continued)

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JEANNETTE MATTHEW

LIBRARIAN, SCHOOL OF LIBERAL ARTS 420 BLAKE STREET

Dr. Tali Conine, chairman of allied health sciences education, served as a curriculum

consultant recently at the Center for Allied Health Professions at Illinois State University.

The Department of Anesthesiolog).__was well represented at the recent An~\µ('l Meeting of the Southern Society of Anesthesiol~ts in Da las. Professor Jerry R. Mrller attended, along with Assistant Professor K.C. Ki who presen ed a paper on "Arterial co2 and Intraocular Pressure." Associate Professor R. Stoeltin presented a paper called "Hemodynamic Effects of Gallamine" and Dr. Louis Bojr b, resident, presented a paper on "Degree and Duration Nitrous Oxide Second Gas Effect on Oxygen."

g were Ors ao Ga an Evere Parsorrs John S. Stone and David L. Ta e.

Dr. Warren A.

And~

professor of anatomy and a member of the Indiana Commission on Aging and the Aged, recently visited Hospice, Inc. at Yale University. Hospice is a new kind of institution where a more humanistic approach to illnesses of the aged is being explored. From New Haven, Dr. Andrew went to New York City for the annual meeting of the American Association of Anatomists. His most recent excursion was to Washington for a meeting of th National Academy of Sciences.

Dr. David Burns, president of the Indiana Speech Association and assistant professor of speech, participated in the spring conference of the Central States' Speech Association in Minneapolis.

Dean William A. Nevill was a featured speaker at the Symposium on Graduate Education in Chemistry at Michigan State University. He spoke on "Must You Teach the Non-Chemist?" and

conducted two workshops on career opportunities.

Professor M.H. Aprison, chief of the Section of Neurobiology in the Institute of Psychiatric Research, recently was invited to speak at Northwestern University to the faculties of

anesthesia, pharmacology and biochemistry. He spoke on his research interest, "Glycine and GABA--Inhibitory Transmitters in the CNS."

Owen A. Paul, chairman and associate professor of industrial supervision, is in Montreal this week for the 1973 International Management Conference with the theme of "Profit through Innovation." Professor Paul is retiring chairman of the board of the society.

Nursing Professor Dixie Koldjeski was a visiting lecturer this month at the University of

v

Washington in Seattle. She presented a research seminar on "Social Factors Influencing Labeling ·Deviant Behavior as Mental Illness" and a seminar on "Exploration of the Psycho- social and Cultural Bases for Community Health Nursing: Implications for Curricula."

"The Challenge of Non-Linear Film" was the subject of a paper presented recently by Warren G. French, chairman and professor of English, at a meeting of the Society for Cinema Studies at the University of Maryland. The paper will be published in Arts and Society, a magazine sponsored by the Extension Division of the University of Wisconsin.

* * *

Referensi

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