VETERINARY MEDICAL SCIENCES / 173 URP 6700-The Capital Web (3) Determining location, size, and appearance of community facilities, circulation, and utilities networks; the city as private investments and activities attached to the deliberately arranged, commonly owned capital web. URP 6745-Housing, Public Policy, and Planning (3) Supply, demand, and market interrelationships. History of government housing policy. Exploration of relationship between housing policy and urban/regional planning. URP 6811-Community Values and Goals (3) Investigation of values and goals achievable through common effort, and tech- niques of community self-evaluation and goal determination. URP 6821-Urban and Regional Systems (3) A quantitative computer-assisted exploration of a comprehensive planning model. URP 6884-Community Conservation and Revitalization (3) Community conservation is a major thrust of National Urban Policy. Relates community revitalization and conservation to the methodology of identification of problem areas, planning and replanning for all types of locations, use and adaptive uses. Federal and state assistance, tax incentives, and other programs. URP 6905-Exploration and Directed Study (1-4; max: 10) URP 6910-Supervised Research (1-5; max: 5) S/U. URP 6911-Planning Research Design (1; max: 3) Emphasis on research design, literature research; student presentations at ap- propriate stages in thesis work. URP 6920--Colloquium (1) Introduction to field; historical, philosophical concepts, processes, issues related to profession of planning. For entering MAURP students. S/U. URP 6931-Topical Seminar (1-4; max; 6) Current planning opportunity examined. URP 6932-Seminar in Urban Planning (1) Introduction to field; historical, philosophical concepts, processes, issues related to profession of planning. S/U. URP 6940-Supervised Teaching (1-5; max: 5) S/U. URP 6941-Urban Planning Internship (3) Off-campus intern- ship experience. S/U. URP 6971-Research for Master's Thesis (1-15) S/U. URP 6979-Terminal Project (1-6; max: 6) This option, in lieu of thesis, accommodates a physical design or plan project which because of its map and graphic content does not fit comfortably within a thesis format. S/U. VETERINARY MEDICAL SCIENCES College of Veterinary Medicine GRADUATE FACULTY 1992-93 Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies: P. C. Kosch. Graduate Coordinators: C. L. Chen; D. J. Forrester; L. M. Hutt-Fletcher; T. J. Wronski. Graduate Research Professor: H. M. Johnson. Eminent Scholar: P. J. Reier. Professors: N. Ackerman; L. F. Archbald; A. C. Asbury; A. F. Barbet; L. Belardinelli; E. L. Besch; M. S. Bloomberg; R. K. Braun; M. P. Brown; C. D. Buergelt; M. J. Burridge; C. F. Burrows; D. D. Buss; P. T. Cardeilhac; W. L. Castleman; C. D. Chen; C. L. Chrisman; C. H. Courtney; M. Drost; D. J. Forrester; K. N. Gelatt; E. P. J. Gibbs; E. C. Greiner; R. R. Gronwall;J. W. Harvey;J. A. Himes; L. M. Hutt-Fletcher; E. R. Jacobson; P. A. Klein; P. C. Kosch; D. A. Kunkle; P. J. Laipis; N. K. Maclaren; A. M. Merritt; R. D. Miles; A. F. Moreland; J. T. McL. Neilson; P. L. Nicoletti; A. B. Peck; V. M. Shille; E. K. Wakeland; A. I. Webb;J. C. Woodard; M. D. Young. Associate Professors: R. J. Bellah; D. E. Brooks; M. B. Brown; G. D. Butcher; R. M. Clemmons; P. T. Colahan; B. R. Collins; W. S. Cripe; P. W. J. B. Dame; Davenport; G. A. Donovan; G. W. Ellison; R. Francis-Floyd; J. M. Gaskin; P. J. Hansen; R. D. Johnson; R. E. Larsen; M. M. LeBlanc; R. J. MacKay; R. L. Reep; D. A. Samuelson; J. K. Shearer; S. F. Sundlof; J. P. Thompson; C. E. Wood; T. J. Wronski. Assistant Professors: D. R. Allred; K. J. Anderson; M. M. Christopher; L. E. Fox; G. G. Gum; B. L. Homer; R. R. King; D. O. Rae; R. E. Raskin; S. M. Roberts; E. B. Stephens; S. S. Suarez; T. W. Vickroy. Assistant Scientists: D. Chakrabarti; M. I. Meltzer. Instructor: M. Campbell-Thompson. The College of Veterinary Medicine offers advanced graduate study leading to the Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in veterinary medical sciences. The program provides extensive training in basic and applied research for qualified students with a baccalaureate degree or a D.V.M. or equivalent degree. Applicants are expected to have a background in the biological sciences, mathemat- ics, chemistry, and physics. Particular attention is paid to the advanced education of veterinarians, those interested solely in research and those interested in combining their graduate study with residency training in a clinical spe- cialty. The College offers three major areas of concentra- tion within the veterinary medical sciences program: Large and Small Animal Clinical Sciences (M.S. only)- physiology, endocrinology, fish diseases, gastroenterology, immunology, laboratory animal comparative medicine, vision sciences, perinatology, reproductive biology, phar- macokinetics, veterinary sports medicine, and wildlife and zoological medicine (C. L. Chen, Graduate Coordinator). Physiological Sciences-comparative anatomy, physi- ology, pharmacology, biochemistry, neurobiology, nutri- tion, reproductive biology, and toxicology (T. J. Wronski, Graduate Coordinator). Infectious Diseases and Experimental Pathology-bac- teriology, parasitology, virology, immunopathology, mo- lecular mechanisms of disease and host defense, epide- miology, and veterinary public health (D. J. Forrester and L. M. Hutt-Fletcher, Graduate Coordinators). The College participates in the interdisciplinary special- ization in toxicology in cooperation with other departments and colleges in both the Health Science Center and the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences and with the Center for Environmental and Human Toxicology (see the Toxicology description under Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies). The following courses in related areas will be acceptable for graduate credit as part of candidates major: Physiologi- cal Sciences-ANS 6751, DAS 6531, BCH 6206, 6415, 6740, BMS 6510, GMS 5400C, 6735, 7706C, 7743. Infec- tious Diseases and Experimental Pathology-BCH 6415, BMS 5603, GMS 5304C, 5621, 6140, 6152, 6330, 6332, 6333, 6381, 6382. Large and Small Animal Clinical Sciences-all of the above. VME 5162C-Avian Diseases (3) Causes, epizootiology, diagno- sis, and methods of prevention and control of avian diseases. Not open to students have taken VME 4162. VME 5242C-Physiology of Body Fluids (4) Prereq: PCB 4745C and BCH 4024, or comparable courses. Physical, endocrine, and neural mechanisms involved in body fluid and cellular homeosta- sis. Renal and cardiovascular mediation emphasized. Offered in odd-numbered years. VME 5244-Physiology of Mammals: Organ Systems (4) Prereq: knowledge of general biochemistry. Emphasis on domestic ani- mals commonly encountered in veterinary medicine. Physiology of nervous, muscle, blood, cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, gastrointestinal, and endocrine systems.