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Page 33 text:
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HEALTH SCIENCES BUILDING medicine HHl i ' Hr J Comparing note the Skeleton. DEAN GEORGE N. AAGAARD Anatomy H STANLEY BENNEH Biochemistry HANS NEURATH Medicine ROBERT H. WILLIAMS Microbiology CHARLES A. EVANS Obstetrics and Gynecology RUSSELL R. deALVAREZ Pathology LESTER ELLERBROOK (acting) Pediatrics ROBERT A. ALDRICH Phormocology JAMES M. DILLE Physiology and Biophysics T, C. RUCH Psychiatry HERBERT S. RIPLEY Public Health and Preventive Medicine WILLIAM E. REYNOLDS Radiology FRED J. HODGES (acting) Surgery HENRY N. HARKINS The University Medical School was having an open house. I was in- terested, so I decided to drop down for an hour or so. I stayed not one but four hours, tramping the halls of the modern Medical-Dental building with increasing fascination. I discovered that the school not only strives to prepare a selected group of students for the practice of medicine through the best edu- cational techniques in the field, but it attempts to develop continuing educational programs for graduate and postgraduate physicians. It also conducts an active program of research and investigation. I learned that the University School of Medicine is fully accredited. In addition, it is affiliated with the King County Hospital, United States Public Health Service Hospital, Seattle Veterans ' Administra- tion, Children ' s Orthopedic Hospital, Firlond Sanatorium, Univer- sity of Washington Child Health Center, and state mental hospitals at Sedro Woolley, Medical Lake, and Steilacoom. 27
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Page 32 text:
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DEAN GEORGE NEFF STEVENS Law School Good afternoon, Mr. Smith. I am Tom Jones, the University of Wash- ington graduate who called you about a position with your law firm. Oh yes, Mr. Jones. I remember your call. I ' ve heard many good things about the University ' s Law School. Your school has the largest law library west of the Mississippi, does it not? Yes, sir, and our school is convenient to federal and state courts, enab- ling us to witness the trial of actual cases. You realize, of course, that you are applying for a position out of your own state, and may be at some disadvantage regarding the lows of this state? I don ' t think so, sir. Our school prepares its students for practice in any state or jurisdiction where the Anglo-American legal system prevails. Our school is a member of the Association of American Law Schools, you know, and is approved by the Council on Legal Education and Admission to the Bar of the American Bar Association. SAVERY HALL Library students practice be- hind reference desk. Didn ' t you know? I ' m studying in the School of Librarian- ship. It ' s a graduate school to equip students as specialists in libraries devoted to law, medicine, engineering, business and other technical fields. Really? I always thought the School of Librorionship pre- pared students to work in libraries like the one in my home town. No, only students who have already obtained their bache- lor ' s degree from a college or university of good standing may gain admission to this school. But one of my friends told me that he was taking some courses from your school, and he ' s still an undergraduate. During an undergraduate ' s senior year, it is sometimes pos- sible for him to gain librorionship knowledge by taking sev- eral introductory courses from the School. avi and librarianship 26 IRVING LIEBERMAN Director of Librorionship
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Page 34 text:
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Today, radio listeners, we take you to the University of Washington College of Pharmacy as a part of our series on educational programs in the state of Washington. The College of Pharmacy was established in July, 1898, by the Board of Regents of the University. It offers an in- tensive course of study in the essentials of pharmacy as a profession. The College itself is accredited as a class A ' college by the American Council on Pharmaceutical Educa- tion. Here we are watching a group of students working in a laboratory class making capsules. Adequate facilities are available here to give students practical experience in al- most every pharmaceutical preparation. The College of Pharmacy also maintains a drug service de- partment, where pharmaceutical preparations are manufac- tured for the benefit of the Health Center, the Schools of Dentistry and Medicine, and other sections of the University. DEAN MARY S. TSCHUDIN Well, Mary! I didn ' t even know you were in Seattle. What are you doing now? hile. I ' m studying nurs- Hi, Judy, yes, I ' ve been up here for quite a ing at the University of Washington. Did you know that in 1948 the University of Washington School of Nursing became the fourth school in the country to become accred- ited by the National League of Nursing Education and the National Organization for Public Health Nursing? The School offers two nurs- ing programs in addition to the Master ' s Degree program for gradu- ate nurses. The basic nursing research program attempts to prepare a nurse for her professional work as soon as possible, and provision is made so that she can work as a nurse port of the time while she is completing her requirements for a degree. Also there is the basic degree program, which allows for a broad general background in addition to the required scientific courses. That really sounds wonderful, Mary. Nursing has certainly become a profession, hasn ' t it? Yes, it has. Our department is recognized as an independent pro- fessional school within the Division of Health Sciences. DEAN JACK E ORR nursing and pharmacy H I TPJwB Tflf k b « Zki ■M - mtk 1 ten i ' H M ■Hi 28 PHARMACY STUDENTS WORK IN LAB
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