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volume fourteen, number thirty-six october 21, 1984

CURRICULUM GROWS AT HERRON SCHOOL OF ART

W

oodworking, ceramics and photography, once stepchildren of the Herron School of art, are now full-fledged members of the art family at the school where rich tradition matches that of its location, the historical Herron-Morton neighborhood. The recent additions of these three majors in the bachelor of fine arts degree program and a

bachelor of arts education degree in art history complement the school's already strong reputation for producing fine painters, sculptors, printmakers and graphic artists.

Herron was founded in 1877 and joined I.U. in 1967.-SAR

MORE AT MASS PROMPT MOVE TO LECTURE HALL

Each Sunday at 5:30 p.m., the Catholic Campus Ministry and Student Center has Mass at the center on Michigan Street. Attendance has grown so much lately that beginning Oct. 14, Mass will be each Sunday evening in Lecture Hall, Room 100. The center also offers midweek meals on Wednesday at the center from 5:15 p.m. to 6:15 p.m. The meal is

$1.50 and is prepared by student crews--who can always use some volunteer help. The Catholic Campus Ministry is also planning a hayride at Eagle Creek Park on Oct. 26, an All Saints Day Mass on Nov. 1, and is now forming a reflection/support group for those who wish to explore their faith more deeply. For more information, call 632-4378.

REGISTER EARLY FOR RASSIAS WEEKEND WORKSHOP

Registration is due Oct. 29 for a weekend workshop in Indianapolis to be taught by John Rassias, creator of the Rassias Method of foreign language instruction. The workshop is in March and is for language educators interested in improving oral fluency. Rassias, professor of foreign language at Dartmouth College who was a member of President Jimmy Carter's Commission on Foreign Language and International Studies, will present his language methodology workshop, March 29-31 at IUPUI. Sponsor is the School of Liberal Arts. The fee is $175. A $50 deposit is required. To register, contact Dr. Leon

Bourke, Cavanaugh Hall, Room 501J.

NICE GOING, NURSING AND LIBERAL ARTS BACKERS~

The School of Nursing is first to report in IUPUI United Way campaign and it's looking good. They have 21 contributors totalling $2,506, an average of $119.33. Already, Nursing has raised two-thirds of the amount it raised last year and it looks as if nursing will rout its own record. (See page 4--United Way Works.)

United Way Campaign coordinators are asked to turn in their partial (early) returns as soon as possible to campus chairman Tom Henry, AO 110, Ext. 2134.

And, giving by friends of the School of Liberal Arts has increased more than 100 per cent this year. Dean William Plater made the announcement during a recent reception to honor those who so generously support the school. Associate Dean James East says the surge in donations is because of a concerted effort to keep the school's constituents informed.

The United Way ... the mark of a truly great community . •

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NEWS 'N' NOTES FROM HERE 'N' THERE

Business Exec Seminar--Div. of Continuing Studies presents, "Executive Image Building,"

Oct. 24-25, Hyatt Regency Hotel. For fees and info, call Ext. 4501.

Graduate Student Seminar--Biochemistry, Xiaoming Guan speaks on "Pure B-Adrenergic Receptor: The Single Polypeptide Responsible for Both Ligand Binding and Mediating Stimulating," Oct. 17, MS 321, 4 p.m.

More Biochemistry--Dr. David Crabb, assistant professor of medicine and biochemistry, LU. School of Medicine, speaks on "Regulation of Alcohol Dehydrogenase Activity in Liver," Oct. 22, 4 p.m., MS 326. Coffee, tea at 3:30 p.m., MS 409.

1855-1955 Clothes--The I . U. Women's Club of Indianapolis presents, "A Look Back at Fashion," with Goodwill Service Guild Volunteers. Columbia Club, Nov. 3, lunch and style show. Guests invited. Call Nancy Wilson, 842-3512.

Need Healthy Men--Healthly males, ages 20-45, non-smokers and smokers, are needed for study. Requires no injections or cutting of the skin. Pay is $8 per hour. For more information, call Belinda, 630-7436, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Day Care Data--The IUPUI Day Care Center, 525 N. Blackford ST., is a sponsor of the Federal Child Care Food Program, and provides minimum priced meals to all enrolled

children, and will not discriminate against any because of race, color, handicap or national origin. This announcement complies with Federal regulations.

Zoowhatsis?--IUPUI Biology Department seminar, "Zoonoses" Human-Companion Animal Links,"

with Dr. Pete Bill, from the department and Cicero Veterinary Hospital. Noon, KB 357.

Refreshments served.

Paper Polishing--"Moving from Draft to Final Product," topic of Writing Center Workshop, Oct. 22 1-2 p.m., CA 427. All welcome. Call Ext. 3824.

10th Conference--Indiana Association for Children and Adults with Learning Disabilities, meets Nov. 1-3, Atkinson Hotel. All welcome. Call 846-9770.

Medical Ethics--Indianapolis Lutheran Campus Ministry presents, "Clinical Medical Ethics," with Mark Siegler, M.D., Pritzker School of Medicine,

u.

of Chicago, on Oct.

24, Emerson Hall, noon-3 p.m. For more, call 925-3588.

Coaches and More--Indianapolis Press Club's 3rd annual Old Oaken Bucket Quarterbacks Luncheon, Nov. 15, Murat Shrine-Arabian Ballroom. Call 636-2343.

Pathology Seminar--Lawrence M. Roth, M.D., department of pathology, I.U. School of Medicine, presents, "The Application of Electron Microscopy to Diagnosis in Gynecologic

Neoplasms and Tumor-Like Conditions," Oct. 25, noon, UH-N436.

Classroom Computers Symposium--Corporation for Science and Technology, one-day seminar, Oct. 25, with the CST Science in Education Committee, North Central High School. Focus on educators of science and math. Call 635-3058.

International Series--Metropolitan Indianapolis Campus Ministry presents "West Africa:

Why Should We Care?," with Anne Fraker, Center for American Studies, Oct. 24, 4 p.m., NU-233. Campus community welcome--no charge.

Chemistry Seminar--Peter Smith, chemistry department, U. Of Michigan, presents, "When is a Reaction Concerted? The Cyclization of Azides," Oct. 24, 4:30 p.m., KB 231. Talk and refreshment, 4 p.m., KB 249. All welcome.

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MORE NEWS

'H'

NOTES

Special Seminar--Department of microbiology and immunology presents Henry H. Claman, M.D., international authority on cellular regulation of immunity and head of the division of clinical immunology, U. Of Colorado School of Medicine, speaking on,

"Experimental Graft Versus Host Disease Across Minor Histocompatibility Barriers,"

Nov. 1, 4 p.m., MS 205. Call 7671.

Grow--IUPUI Div. of Continuing Studies presents seminar, "Uprooting & Re-Rooting:

Relocation Workshop," Nov. 3. For fees and more information, call Ext. 4501.

It's Mime Business-Midsummer Mime Theatre Inc., presents 2nd annual "Comedy Cabaret!,"

beginning Nov. 8. For schedule and tickets, call 636-0667.

Harmony--Park Center Community Counseling Services presents psychiatrist and best- selling au th or, Dr. Harold Bloomfield, in a round table discussion on, "Making Peace With Your Parents," Oct. 24, 7:30 p.m., Fort Wayne. Call (219) 482-9111.

Defense VIPS--Guest speakers, Dr. Dov S. Zakheim, assistant under secretary of policy and resources, U.S. Department of Defense, and Dr. Olin C. Robison, president,

Middlebury College, speak at a luncheon on, "Prospects for Arms Control and Reducing the Risks of Nuclear War," Oct. 23, noon, Indianapolis Athletic Club. Reservations due Oct.

22. Sponsors are the Indiana Council on World Affairs, IUPUI Office of International Programs and Indianapolis Committee on Foreign Relations. For cost and more infor- mation, call Ext. 2081.

Geology- Colloquium-Dr. Donald D. Carr, Indiana Geological Survey, speaks on "Studies of the New Albany Shale as an Energy Source," Oct. 23, 2 p .m., CA 435.

HONORS AND ACCOLADES

Judy Feinberg, MS, OTR, FAOTA, former supervisor of adult service, occupational Therapy department and Kenneth Brandt, M.D., chief of rheumatology division, co-authored the article, "Allied Heal th Team Management of Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients,:• published in the American Journal of Occupational Therapy, Sept. issue.

Bernard Moos, carpenter in the physical plant plans to play golf and fish after his retirement next month following 14 years service.

Drs. H. Glenn Bohlen, J.J. Friedman and Carl F. Rothe, department of physiology and biophysics, attended the Third World Congress of Microcirculation at Oxford University, England, recently, where Dr. Bohlen was invited to speak on, "Microvascular Adpation During Hypertension."

Phillip Coons, M.D., assistant professor in the department of psychiatry, gave a paper,

"A Comprehensive Study and Followup of 20 Multiple Personality Patients," at the first International Conference of Multiple Personality/Dissociative States, in Chicago last month. He was a faculty member in workshops and was elected secretary of the Interna- tional Society for the Study of Multiple Personality.

Neil Lantz, director of administrative affairs at IUPUI, was given the Outstanding Volunteer Award--1984, by the American Red Cross, Indianapolis Chapter, for his dedicated service and leadership.

Beverly E. Hill, Ed.D., director, Medical Educational Resources Program (MERP), School of Medicine, recently was appointed to the board of directors of the CHExchange, a national organization for continuing health education.

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GENER.OUSITY OPENS THE WAY FROM GHETTO TO IUPUI

Can a lad who never slept on a bed 'til he was a teenager make his way from a rat

infested ghetto room he shared with an invalid mother ·to become a dean at IUPUI? He can and he did. James East, associate dean for development and external affairs in Liberal Arts, says it was the generousity of givers to the United Way more than 40 years ago, and the type of kindness he had never known at home, that made it possible for him to spend six days a week at a Boys Club and to become the first in his family to graduate from high school, not to mention college. Things are still the same for many children who without Girls Clubs and Boys Clubs have no where else to turn. Those and 65 other agencies need your gifts. A co-worker and thousands who hurt are waiting for your pledge. (We should be proud that IUPUI employees have always been among the most generous in past United Way campaigns.)

A coed aerobic conditioning class is offered beginning Nov. 5 at the nata- torium. Classes meet Monday and Wednesday from 5:30-6:30 p.m. The program will run on a monthly basis, with eight classes per month taught by Terry Jacki. Register now at the natatorium box office or by phone using Master- Card or VISA--Ext. 7364. Cost is $25-per month.

POSITIONS AVAILABLE

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, Indiana Higher Education Telecommunication System (IHETS) seeks nominations and applications for executive director to replace Dr. Jane G. Richards, re- tiring in December. Responsibilities include operating SUVON, staff, budgets, consult- ing with member campuses, ensuring that programs and services comply with specified goals, maintain communications with the industry, represent IHETS in print and personal presentations. Desirable qualifications include familiarity with higher education in Indiana, broad knowledge of telecommunication services and operations, several years' administrative experience, advanced degrees and excellent communication skills. Send nominations and resumes by Nov. 15 to: George T. Lukemeyer, M.D., chairman, Search and Screen Committee, IHETS, 957 West Michigan St., Indianapolis 46223.

FACULTY APPOINTMENT, ASD Nursing Program, one-year beginning spring 1985--part-time calendar year, I.U. School of Nursing. Primary responsibility--implementing the chal- lenge portion for an LPN to RN Mobility Option Federal Grant Project, Bureau of Nursing, HHS; preparing student seminars, coordinating skills check-offs and clinical supervision.

Requires MSN and teaching experience in an NLN accredited school of nursing. Knowledge and skill in maternal child-health with experience in a maternity unit desirable.

Contact Ruth Woodham, NU 403G, Ext. 2400.

ACADEMIC COUNSELOR, University Division, IUPUI, 12-month, entry-level, opening Dec. 15, for counseling in undergraduate degrees and personal counseling. Salary $15,000.

Requires MS degree in guidance and counseling or related area with counseling

practicum. Send letter of application, resume and transcript of graduate course work or placement credentials and three recent letters of recommendation to: Staff Recruitment and Selection Committee, University Division, 424 Agnes St., Indianapolis 46202.

(Black males are urged to apply.) Deadline is Nov. 19.

green Sheet .

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*News Bureau

Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis

355 Lansing Street Indianapolis, Indiana 46202

(I.U. IS AN EO/AA/EOE EMPLOYER.)

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