LYNN ARBOGAST, M.D., Director of the Division of Allied Health Scienoea ELTON RIDLEY, M.B.A., Director of University Hospitals. A minor student who comes from another state or country for the predominant purpose of attending the University shall not be admitted to resident student status upon the basis of the residence of a guardian, except upon appeal to the Trustees in each case.
ACADEMIC REGULATIONS
May be used only with approval of the Dean of the School and the Dean of the Faculties. When an Incomplete is assigned, a record must be maintained in the office of the department in which the grade was given.
Medical Center
Indiana University basketball and football tickets are available at student prices, and many Medical Center students plan weekends on the Bloomington campus as part of their social calendar. The campus chorus, Medical Center Choraliers, is open to all students on the Medical Center campus.
STUDENT SERVICES AT INDIANAPOLIS
The proximity of Bloomington also allows an evening's entertainment on that campus, where a series of inviting programs of theatre, music, and lectures which the Medical Center students may attend are scheduled. The organization is composed of two representatives from each of these eleven divisions or programs: Division of Allied Health Sciences, Downtown Campus, Graduate School of Social Service, Herron School of Art, Indiana University (Methodist) Associate of Arts in Nursing Program, Indianapolis Law School, Normal College of the American Gymnastic Union, School of Dentistry, School of Medicine, School of Nursing Degree Programs, and the Medical Sciences Graduate School.
FINANCIAL AID
Division of Allied Health Sciences
Because admission and degree requirements vary, a candidate should communicate both with the Division of Allied Health Sciences and a particular graduate school or division. Each candidate is now counseled individually by both the Division of Allied Health Sciences and the cooperating school or division he chooses.
CURRICULUM
Selection of those to be admitted to the Medical Center in Indianapolis will begin on or before February 1 of each year from the applicants who have filed or re-filed for admission prior to this date. All completed applications are to be submitted by the applicant to the Office of the Division of Allied Health Sciences at either Bloomington or Indianapolis.
Directory for the Division of Allied Health Sciences
The letters preceding the number of each of the courses in the Division of Allied Health Sciences indicate the program. There is no guarantee of acceptance, and students should be prepared to elect an alternate program in the Division of Allied Health Sciences or the College of Arts and Sciences.
MEDICAL RECORDS
Assistant Professors Benz, Jung, Parekh, Sanghvi; Instructors Dritsas, Feeley, Hocker, Lee, Lehman, Young The first three years of the medical technology curriculum are designed to provide a broadly based background in chemistry and the biological sciences, as well as op- portunity to elect courses from the humanities. After graduation, students are eligible to apply for examination for certification by the Board of Registry of the American Society of Clinical Pathologists. The courses given in the fourth year consist of a rotating internship in the clinical laboratories of the hospitals.
Upon satisfactory completion of this year, students are eligible to take the Registry examination of the American Society of Clinical Pathologists.
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
To be admitted, the student must meet the general requirements as outlined in the Bulletin of the Graduate Division of the School of Education and be certified as M.T. Occupational therapy may be indicated for neurological im- pairment, emotional illness, physical injuries, perceptual deficits, birth defects, mental retardation, heart disease, and problems of aging. Graduates of the degree program are eligible for the examination leading to admission to the Registry of Occupational Therapists maintained by the American Occupational Therapy Association.
The curriculum in the Occupational Therapy program is approved and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Association and the American Medical Asso- ciation.
PHYSICAL THERAPY
To be admitted the applicant must meet the general requirements of the Graduate Division of the School of Education. Because of increasing interest among dental hygienists for these opportunities, a degree program is offered by the Division of Allied Health Sciences of the School of Medicine. The fourth or senior year must be taken in the Division of Allied Health Sciences of the School of Medicine in Indianapolis.
An alternate degree course with a fourth year in the School of Education is offered at Fort Wayne and South Bend.
PUBLIC HEALTH-ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
PUBLIC HEALTH ADMINISTRATION
RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGY
Upon successful completion of the program, a student receives the degree Associate of Science in Radiologic Technology from the Division of General and Technical Studies of Indiana University and is eligible to take the Registry examination of the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists to become certified as a Registered Radiologic Technologist (R.T.). Further information may be obtained from the Director of the Radiologic Technology Program, IUPUI Medical Center, 1100 West Michigan Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202. Complete programs in Radiologic Technology are also offered at the following campuses of Indiana University.
Programs at Indiana University Southeast (Jeffersonville-New Albany) are currently in the process of accreditation.
RESPIRATORY THERAPY
15 Respiratory Therapy courses in the 200 series in Indianapolis are open only to students enrolled in the Respiratory Therapy program.
HOSPITAL DIETARY TECHNOLOGY
VOCATIONAL EDUCATION
DIVISION OF ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCES 39 master's degree curriculum is flexible and may be tailored to individual career objectives. Courses may be selected from one or more of the vocational disciplines and/or the general field of vocational education. A minimum of 6 graduate semester hours of professional education courses selected from one or more of the vocational education disciplines which include distributive, agricultural, trade and industrial, business, home economics, and health occupations education.
If pro- fessional certification in Indiana is desired, the student must select 9 hours in each of the areas in which he wishes certification.).
Courses Offered, 1970-71
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE COURSES
DIVISION OF ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCES COURSES
Describes organization and administration of various types o( programs of the Dental Health Divisioa of Indiana State Board of Health. AH R435 Records and Administrative Procedures (1 er.) . Lectures dealing with Atomic Energy Commission rules and regulations concerning the tue of radio- active isotope materials; records, coding, and fi)jng systems. Nursing procedures and techniques used in the general care of the patient, with emphasis on the role of the radiologic technologist in various nursing and emergency situations.
Lectures and laboratory demonst.-ations used to aid in understanding the principles of the radiologic apparatus and accessories used.
CORE AND ELECTIVE COURSES
Anatomy and Physiology
Anthropology
Biology
Botany
Business
Focuses on the nature and development of law as an expression of social policy, the American judicial system, and a number of basic legal principles encountered by all citizens, primarily in the fields of torts, contracts, and agency. Business administration from standpoint of manager of a business firm operating in the contem- porary economic, political, and social environment. Introduction to the theory and operation of basic instrumental and other methods used in the practice of clinical chemistry.
Laboratory instruction in the fundamental techniques of organic chemistrJ and the use of general synthetic methods.
Comparative Literature
Primarily for students in programs of the Division of Allied Health Sciences and students in other areas of applied biology. Basic vocabulary of some 1,000 words, together with materials for formation of compounds, en- ables students to build working vocabulary of several thousand words.
Economics
Educatio"
English
DIVISION OF ALLIED HEALTH SCIENCES 53 The following courses are open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors and to second·. Representative works of fiction; stresses structural technique in the novel, theories and kinds of fiction, and thematic scope of the novel.
Fine Arts
French
Geography
G220 Second-Year Composition, Conversation, and Reading II (5 er.) G222 Second-Year Composition and Conversation II (3 er.). Credit may not be applied toward degrees in the College of Arts and Sciences but may be counted toward degrees in the Division of Allied Health Sciences. Credit may not be applied toward degrees in the College of Arts and Sciences b'tit may be counted toward degrees in the Division of Allied Health Sciences.
P140 Elementary Ethics (3 er.) . Some ancient, medieval, or modern philosophers' answers to ethical problems {e.g., nature of good and evil, relation of duty to self-interest, and objectivity of moral judgment).
Physics
Police Administration
Political Science
Psychology
Origins of the Christian movement and development of its beliefs, practices, and institutions in the lst century. Social issues such as race relations, pov<"rty, the inner city, and violence are analyzed, with particular emphasis on the hnplications of sociological analysis for public policy. Development of speech and theorie~ of oral discourse; the communication process and hum.an be- havior and culture; speech in conflict situations.
Modern concepts of parliamentary forms in legislative assemblies and huisness meetings; practice in use of parliamentary procedure.
Faculty and Staff. 1969-70
PROGRAM DIRECTORS
MEDICAL CENTER
School of Dentistry; Chairman, and Professor of Pedodontics (School of Dentistry) McDoNNELL, TERENCE, R.T. Indiana University, 1963), Lecturer in Radiologic Tech-. Indiana University, 1968), Lecturer in Radiologic Technology REESE, IsAAC C., M.S. University of Rochester, 1961), Assistant Professor of Radiology. University of Minnesota, 1966), Assistant Professor of Pathology SCHULTHEIS, RICHARD L., M.D. Indiana University, 1967), Assistant Professor of Law (Indianapolis);.
Indiana University, 1945), Chairman, Division of Clinical Oral Pathology, and Professor of Oral Pathology (School of Dentistry, Graduate School).
BEECH GROVE
ASCP, 1952), Lecturer in Medical Technology McCLANAHAN, KAROLYN SuE, B.S. University of Wisconsin, 1958), Instructor in Medical Tech- nology. University of Utah, 1968), Instructor in Medical Technology LusT, DoRIT E., B.S. Indiana University, 1949), Lecturer in Medical Technology MARKEY, RAYMOND L., Lecturer in Medical Technology. University of Illinois, 1948), Instructor in Medical Technology PASCUZZI, CHRIS A., M.D. Creighton University, 1950), Assistant Professor of Medical.
Indiana University, 1963), Instructor in Medical Technology REED, ROBERT G., JR., M.D. Indiana University, 1951), Instructor in Medical Tech-.
AFFILIATED LECTURERS
University of Pennsylvania, 1957), Director, Physical Therapy, Parkview Memorial Hospital, Fort Wayne KINSMAN, DEBORAH, M.S. rector, Physical Therapy Department, Vanderbilt Hospital, Nashville, Tenn. University of Wisconsin, 1957), Clinical Instructor, Highland View Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. 1954), Occupa- tional Therapist, Veterans Administration Hospital, Indianapolis. State University of New York at Buffalo, 1960), Chief Physical Therapist, Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis REEDY, ROBERT, B.S. Therapy, Lutheran Hospital, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Medical College of Virginia, 1950), Chief Physical Therapist, Veterans Administration Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio. 1959), Children's Unit, Central State Hospital, Indianapolis.