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Page 50 text:
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ant Part of Curriculum Small Animal Medicine Dogs, cats, parakeets, Canaries, chinchillas, rabbits, and monkeys are many of the animals treated in this section. Junior and senior students in this section have their own cases which they treat-and hopefully cure. Baths, brushings, prophylactic dental treatment, and reticulocyte counts, are part of the everyday treat- ments that are learned in this section. This section al- lows the students to work up their own cases, decide fwith approvalj their own regimen of therapy, and suc- cessfully treat their cases so they can be released to their owners. Most of the faculty in this section are born healers. Dogs and cats are not the only animals treated in this section-though at times maybe it should be that way. 3l
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Page 49 text:
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Clinical Experience Signi' Receiving and Radiology The receiving section offers the junior and senior student the opportunity to meet the public in a client-doctor atmosphere. It is this section that the students hear praises and complaints from normal and neurotic owners. Each animal is given a complete physical and a tentative diagnosis is found. Any animal entering or leaving the hospital must go through receiving. Students in receiving are also assigned to the radiology section where skill is obtained in handling and radiographing small and large animals. A good guess is often re- quired in trying to read some of the self evident radiographs. Small Animal Receiving fP.R. at its bestj. S lg s Radiologic technique-a must for At times the owners of large animals are more business proper and efficient use of an ex- like and a little more sensible than small animal owners- pensive piece of equipment. at times. 30
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Page 51 text:
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will ALI.. HORSES MUST HAVE THEIR HOOFS CLEANED BEFORE THEY ENTER THE RADIOLOGY AREA The Eleventh Commandment Large Animal Medicine 3 Q A necessary part . . . HMOOYY Students in large animal medicine are given the op- portunity to practice their knowledge of medicine and the techniques of handling large farm animals. The work varies greatly from the new and different to the unpleasant but necessary to the sometimes surprising but gratifying experience that cows really do have per- sonalities. The variety of animals goes from goats to horses, sheep to cows, and pigs to camels. The day to day boredom can always be broken by running a Htrich, Vibrio and semen motility. Or, for the short armed student there is always a displaced abomasum in a 2000 lb. ornery, old bull. 49, . ,xx I ., V Vw?-A 'if xx O N x W X XA Nw - X 'N X QQTESX j ' 1 O 1 J
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