>>>>>>Official DMU Class of 2009<<<<<<

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Creamfly said:
I'll buy tha first round cause, everybody remembers who buys the first one. You can always say "I bought the first one" and everybody else says "Yeah, that's right. Let me get this one". You end up only buying about two rounds. 😀

Deal...I'll buy the last round, you know, the one that puts you over the edge...so then I can always say...remember that time how I F***ed you up, you didn't even finish your last drink I bought you, you owe me!

👍
 
DOitright said:
Deal...I'll buy the last round, you know, the one that puts you over the edge...so then I can always say...remember that time how I F***ed you up, you didn't even finish your last drink I bought you, you owe me!

👍


Can girls play at this game too? And if so, do we get a handicap?
 
Munchkin6245 said:
Can girls play at this game too? And if so, do we get a handicap?



Ahhh yes I remember first year buying drinks for everyone. Loan money makes you feel rich........if I haven't left of michigan yet I'll be in for this game too!!!
 
Munchkin6245 said:
Can girls play at this game too? And if so, do we get a handicap?

As far as I'm concerned...all are invited! The more the merrier! It goes back to that psychological aspect of drinking with friends...the more people, the less rounds you end up buying compared to how much you drink! The fact that one or two rounds you buy may be fairly large doesn't come into play, because that just wouldn't be fun!

Cremaster...hopefully you'll still be in town!

Cheers

J
 
All this talk of drinking is giving me a hangover already. To answer the cali question, I grew up in Bakersfield. Some like to call it central California, but I like to think of it more along the lines of the crouch of California. You know, right in the middle of everything, kinda smells weird but really isn't that much fun. Ok I will stop now, don't want to scare anyone before I meet them.

Oh and it was not an offical snow day, it was a "I don't feel like sitting at work today snow day."
 
Now all this talk about beer has brought me to around to signing in. That, and being accepted to DMU for the Class of 2009 👍 . I just wanted to pop in and say 'hey' and I think it's a great idea to get to know some of you prior to pulling all my hair out in August. If you know what an I.P.A. is and/or you don't think that Bud Ice makes for a great crafted brew, I think we'll get along famously.

Old Mil- I think I was at your interview day. You're from Pella right? Have you heard from anyone else from our interview day joining us? That's November 5th if anyone can remember.

I still can't quite get my head around the idea that I'm actually going to med school. Anyway, congratulations to everyone.
 
DOPEDERSON said:
All this talk of drinking is giving me a hangover already. To answer the cali question, I grew up in Bakersfield. Some like to call it central California, but I like to think of it more along the lines of the crouch of California. You know, right in the middle of everything, kinda smells weird but really isn't that much fun. Ok I will stop now, don't want to scare anyone before I meet them.

Oh and it was not an offical snow day, it was a "I don't feel like sitting at work today snow day."


Hey, how many of you were in the Dec 16th interview group?

I can't believe how excited I am for the start of medical school... I'm so bad, I bought USMLE books and a cute pink stethescope yesterday, because I was so excited. Okay, so the talk of the blizzard from H is a little disenheartening, but hey, I did say when I was little that it'd be a cold day in H before I would go... *tee hee hee* 😀

Just wondering... Anyone else from Utah?
 
Mad Cow said:
Now all this talk about beer has brought me to around to signing in. That, and being accepted to DMU for the Class of 2009 👍 . I just wanted to pop in and say 'hey' and I think it's a great idea to get to know some of you prior to pulling all my hair out in August. If you know what an I.P.A. is and/or you don't think that Bud Ice makes for a great crafted brew, I think we'll get along famously.

Old Mil- I think I was at your interview day. You're from Pella right? Have you heard from anyone else from our interview day joining us? That's November 5th if anyone can remember.

I still can't quite get my head around the idea that I'm actually going to med school. Anyway, congratulations to everyone.

Welcome, congrats, and Old Mil if you are from Pella I did my undergrad there at Central. There are two other Central grads in my class, and 5 in the first year class, so you may feel at home.......
 
Mad Cow said:
Now all this talk about beer has brought me to around to signing in. That, and being accepted to DMU for the Class of 2009 👍 . I just wanted to pop in and say 'hey' and I think it's a great idea to get to know some of you prior to pulling all my hair out in August. If you know what an I.P.A. is and/or you don't think that Bud Ice makes for a great crafted brew, I think we'll get along famously.

Old Mil- I think I was at your interview day. You're from Pella right? Have you heard from anyone else from our interview day joining us? That's November 5th if anyone can remember.

I still can't quite get my head around the idea that I'm actually going to med school. Anyway, congratulations to everyone.


Mad Cow I was part of the Nov 5th crew. The red headed guy
 
DOitright said:
Well I never said I'll buy...but I got a good game we can play...I buy a round, you buy a round. It subconsciously makes you think you're buying only half as much! Deal? 👍

I've got a good game we can play...involves a foosball table. Losing team buys...but losing team picks. 😱 This game has been responsible for some of the most unholy creations to ever come out of a neighborhood pub.
 
Mad Cow said:
...you don't think that Bud Ice makes for a great crafted brew...

There are people who think this?

mad cow said:
Old Mil- I think I was at your interview day. You're from Pella right? Have you heard from anyone else from our interview day joining us? That's November 5th if anyone can remember.

Yep, I was there Nov 5th, and I am from Pella. I actually just sold my house and will be moving next month.
 
cremaster2007 said:
Welcome, congrats, and Old Mil if you are from Pella I did my undergrad there at Central. There are two other Central grads in my class, and 5 in the first year class, so you may feel at home.......

Hey cremaster, sounds like Central grads are fairly well represented. I didn't actually go there, I ended up here courtesy of an ex-wife and a divorce. Did my go back to school work at William Penn down in Oskaloosa and am originally of the class of 1991 from Notre Dame.

Out of curiousity, do you know if any of your fellow Central grads are commuting from Pella?
 
Anyone interested in being room mates? I have a cute dog, an awesome sound system, and furniture. 😎
 
Old_Mil said:
Hey cremaster, sounds like Central grads are fairly well represented. I didn't actually go there, I ended up here courtesy of an ex-wife and a divorce. Did my go back to school work at William Penn down in Oskaloosa and am originally of the class of 1991 from Notre Dame.

Out of curiousity, do you know if any of your fellow Central grads are commuting from Pella?


Ahhh, well at least you know how exciting Pella can be for the 18-22 year old😉 But just so you don't feel lonely you can probably talk some of those 1st years into wearing wooden shoes for you from time to time........to help with the homesickness🙂
 
For all of the individuals just elated to attend DMU, go for it, it's probably for you, especially for those of you that just can't conceal your zeal that you get to "treat the whole patient" instead of whatever it is MD's do, and want to continue pigeon-holeing the MD profession as a bunch of arrogant know nothings, because they don't practice the sacred OMM. This philosophy is rampant at DMU. For the rest of you that just aren't sure if DMU is for you, run while you still have options.
---From somebody's who's been there
 
EMT_DO said:
For all of the individuals just elated to attend DMU, go for it, it's probably for you, especially for those of you that just can't conceal your zeal that you get to "treat the whole patient" instead of whatever it is MD's do, and want to continue pigeon-holeing the MD profession as a bunch of arrogant know nothings, because they don't practice the sacred OMM. This philosophy is rampant at DMU. For the rest of you that just aren't sure if DMU is for you, run while you still have options.
---From somebody's who's been there

hmmm...not too sure how to reply to this post. I'll tell you my first reaction was laughter (sorry). Sounds like you have some sort of bitterness built up, and for whatever reason feel like you need to take it out on us...bummer. Feel free to judge DMU however you see fit, but please keep your personal opinions about its graduates seperate, we aren't machines that are programmed strictly by where we went to school!

Good luck to you, and I hope you find solice somewhere else!

Cheers,

J
 
EMT_DO said:
For all of the individuals just elated to attend DMU, go for it, it's probably for you, especially for those of you that just can't conceal your zeal that you get to "treat the whole patient" instead of whatever it is MD's do, and want to continue pigeon-holeing the MD profession as a bunch of arrogant know nothings, because they don't practice the sacred OMM. This philosophy is rampant at DMU. For the rest of you that just aren't sure if DMU is for you, run while you still have options.
---From somebody's who's been there


I understand some of the reason you made that comment, but not everyone at dmu does that...........you can't blame an entire school for a few people's actions/comments. DMU does a good job of trying to get you motivated about OMM which is what separates a DO from an MD. However, you should take a look and realize that many guest lecturers second year are MD's and there have been MD's on staff for awhile. I doubt I will use OMM a lot to treat my patients in the fields that I am looking at going into, and I don't feel like DMU is forcing me to believe in all their philosophies. I think they are just trying to prepare me for COMLEX. I'm sorry you had such a bad experience here, but there's no need to post a comment like that in this link. Everyone in here is excited to be heading to DMU, and I for one don't really appreciate it.
 
EMT_DO said:
For all of the individuals just elated to attend DMU, go for it, it's probably for you, especially for those of you that just can't conceal your zeal that you get to "treat the whole patient" instead of whatever it is MD's do, and want to continue pigeon-holeing the MD profession as a bunch of arrogant know nothings, because they don't practice the sacred OMM. This philosophy is rampant at DMU. For the rest of you that just aren't sure if DMU is for you, run while you still have options.
---From somebody's who's been there


Gall... I agree with the others... how do I react to this one.

Ummm... I turned down MD schools to go to DMU, because I liked it... the people are nice there and they foster a team work environment. And I like the treating of the whole patient... so 😛 at you. (okay, so that was the closest emoticon to a rasberry.)
😀
 
Eiko said:
I turned down MD schools to go to DMU, because I liked it... the people are nice there and they foster a team work environment. And I like the treating of the whole patient

Agreed. I know I won't have the OMM piece if I go MD--and I have no regrets now as I turn down interviews at MD schools since DMU went to the trouble of showing me what I would learn there and how it would impact my professional life.

I'm super-excited to be going there. I fully respect both paths, and I've chosen this one for me. That's all there is to it. 👍
 
DOPEDERSON said:
Mad Cow I was part of the Nov 5th crew. The red headed guy

I was/ am the guy from milwaukee(hence mad cow) who had the story about understanding the cook who said i had hair like a girl in Spanish. i was hoping a lot of that crew got in, that was a good time.
 
EMT_DO said:
For all of the individuals just elated to attend DMU, go for it, it's probably for you, especially for those of you that just can't conceal your zeal that you get to "treat the whole patient" instead of whatever it is MD's do, and want to continue pigeon-holeing the MD profession as a bunch of arrogant know nothings, because they don't practice the sacred OMM. This philosophy is rampant at DMU. For the rest of you that just aren't sure if DMU is for you, run while you still have options.
---From somebody's who's been there


I'm not as elegant as the others; you're a schmuck.

For somebody who's "been there", it doesn't sound like you've been anywhere else. Get over it.
 
Creamfly said:
I'm not as elegant as the others; you're a schmuck.

For somebody who's "been there", it doesn't sound like you've been anywhere else. Get over it.

Thank you...well said!
 
Eiko said:
Hey, how many of you were in the Dec 16th interview group?

I can't believe how excited I am for the start of medical school... I'm so bad, I bought USMLE books and a cute pink stethescope yesterday, because I was so excited. Okay, so the talk of the blizzard from H is a little disenheartening, but hey, I did say when I was little that it'd be a cold day in H before I would go... *tee hee hee* 😀

Just wondering... Anyone else from Utah?


Woah...wana be study buddies?? 😀
 
mzafaran said:
Woah...wana be study buddies?? 😀

😉 You bring the munchies and you have a deal. 😀
 
EvoDevo said:
Anyone interested in being room mates? I have a cute dog, an awesome sound system, and furniture. 😎
Just curious, what kind of dog do you have? I'm a dog fanatic. I can recommend some great places to take your dogs around des moines, my wife and i like to find places where we can let our dogs off leash and they can really run around. Let me know if that is something you are interested in. Do you guys have any other random questions about des moines in general or school life? By the way sounds like emtdo got rejected from dmu.... Sour grapes much?
 
EvoDevo said:
Anyone interested in being room mates? I have a cute dog, an awesome sound system, and furniture. 😎


Only if you want a feline and a female as roomies. 😀



By the way, aren't you still waiting on the match? Good luck!
 
Dartos Vader said:
Do you guys have any other random questions about des moines in general or school life? By the way sounds like emtdo got rejected from dmu.... Sour grapes much?

Poor Emtdo... no wonder the upset post... I feel for him. That would be hard. I don't know how I would feel if I didn't make it in.

Anyway, here's a few questions for you...

Is Council Bluffs area just as cheap to live in as the area around the school?

What happens in orientation? Do we get a dvd/cd-rw in our laptops?

Is the first month of school really the hardest?

When is a good time to start the electives courses?

What are the test formats like?

Do you really study as much as people say or is all the info you need in the notepool?

What do the student council members really do? When are they elected?

Okay, so I have billion more of these dumb questions, but hey, we'll just start with these? 😉
 
Eiko said:
Poor Emtdo... no wonder the upset post... I feel for him. That would be hard. I don't know how I would feel if I didn't make it in.

Anyway, here's a few questions for you...

Is Council Bluffs area just as cheap to live in as the area around the school?

What happens in orientation? Do we get a dvd/cd-rw in our laptops?

Is the first month of school really the hardest?

When is a good time to start the electives courses?

What are the test formats like?

Do you really study as much as people say or is all the info you need in the notepool?

What do the student council members really do? When are they elected?

Okay, so I have billion more of these dumb questions, but hey, we'll just start with these? 😉
During orientation you mostly get introduced to the school during the day and get all your stuff and meet your advisors. Then at night there are a lot of activities to get to know your classmates. I'm not sure about the laptops or council bluffs. The first month of school isn't actually harder than any other month, its just the scariest. Youre not used to having so many tests so you can feel a little overwhelmed. Plus you have that little voice in your head yelling "This is med school, don't blow it!" After a month or three you start to relax and realize it's just school, which you are already good at. The elective courses all have a specific start date (as far as I know) but I wouldn't start off taking extra courses right off the bat (give yourself a little time to ease into things) except maybe pbl biochem. by the way, i didnt take pbl biochem, but i heard good things. It wont help you pass the class though, it's purely for your own education. Tests are ALL multiple choice and you will have them fairly frequently. It's true when they say that med school subject material isn't that hard, you just learn it an amazing rate. When you get to christmas break you will be amazed at how much you learned and how quickly it went. Most people dont study as much as you'd think, but some do. I think if you treat med school as a job and spend 8-10 hours a day on school you will kick butt. I'm not in student council but ill have portier post on that.
 
Munchkin6245 said:
Only if you want a feline and a female as roomies. 😀



By the way, aren't you still waiting on the match? Good luck!
I'll consider it. 😀

Yes. It's in 20-something days, but I'm not holding my breath......
 
Dartos Vader said:
Just curious, what kind of dog do you have? I'm a dog fanatic. I can recommend some great places to take your dogs around des moines, my wife and i like to find places where we can let our dogs off leash and they can really run around. Let me know if that is something you are interested in. Do you guys have any other random questions about des moines in general or school life? By the way sounds like emtdo got rejected from dmu.... Sour grapes much?
He's a mix (I think) of Golden Retriever and Collie. I'll never be really certain as he's a shelter rescue puppy. 😍

Yes, I'd LOVE to have that kind of information. Thank you so much for offerring. I'd also be interested in apartments/condos that are near places where I can take Rover for good walks.
 
Just wanted to se the record stright, I'm a third year at DMU, and had the full experience of what DMU has to offer. For those of you who say I'm a schmuck and don't know what I'm talking about and DMU is just the greatest school ever let me ask you this: 1. Why do they have such a difficlut time finding professors to teach 2nd year students? 2. Why are most alumni so unwilling to donate and completly disgusted with how DMU operates?
Why are certain classes. namely pathology, so poorly taught? Consider this when you call me a schmuck please.
 
EMT_DO said:
Just wanted to se the record stright, I'm a third year at DMU, and had the full experience of what DMU has to offer. For those of you who say I'm a schmuck and don't know what I'm talking about and DMU is just the greatest school ever let me ask you this: 1. Why do they have such a difficlut time finding professors to teach 2nd year students? 2. Why are most alumni so unwilling to donate and completly disgusted with how DMU operates?
Why are certain classes. namely pathology, so poorly taught? Consider this when you call me a schmuck please.

I'm not the one who called you a schmuck, but you deserved it. I think you were called a schmuck because you posted a negative, unneeded post, in this thread. you could have worded your opinions differently if you wanted to be accepted and have your opinions appreciated. it was a very negative post and it seemed as though you wanted to make us feel bad for choosing DMU. I'm sorry you have had a bad experience at DMU, and by the way it sounds, would have made a different choice if you were in our shoes again. But I am happy I choose DMU and am looking forward to my time there. although I will keep your opinions in the back of my mind!

cheers

J
 
EMT_DO said:
Just wanted to se the record stright, I'm a third year at DMU, and had the full experience of what DMU has to offer. For those of you who say I'm a schmuck and don't know what I'm talking about and DMU is just the greatest school ever let me ask you this: 1. Why do they have such a difficlut time finding professors to teach 2nd year students? 2. Why are most alumni so unwilling to donate and completly disgusted with how DMU operates?
Why are certain classes. namely pathology, so poorly taught? Consider this when you call me a schmuck please.


Oh the drama! Sounds like med school is a soap opera. I am sure that DMU has its problems, as do all other universities. Maybe you need to travel over the rainbow and find the perfect medical school right next to the pot of gold. The reason everyone jumped down your throat is the simple fact that You are pointing out supposedly negative aspects of DMU that none of us, scared-little-soon-to-be-first-years, want to hear. Like I said, I am sure that the school has its faults, but I at least would like the chance to form my own opinions on the matter. Trust me when I say that I will have no trouble finding these faults if they exist, as I am very secure in the fact that I have one of the most pessimistic attitudes ever. My advice to you is to talk to someone who has real problems, and then maybe you won’t feel so sorry about your situation. Cheers! 😀
 
DOitright said:
I'm not the one who called you a schmuck, but you deserved it. I think you were called a schmuck because you posted a negative, unneeded post, in this thread. you could have worded your opinions differently if you wanted to be accepted and have your opinions appreciated. it was a very negative post and it seemed as though you wanted to make us feel bad for choosing DMU. I'm sorry you have had a bad experience at DMU, and by the way it sounds, would have made a different choice if you were in our shoes again. But I am happy I choose DMU and am looking forward to my time there. although I will keep your opinions in the back of my mind!

cheers

J


i agree I think your comments are/were offensive, though, there is some truth to them. To answer your questions, some of the reason its hard to find teachers to come teach is because course coordinators aren't always the same, its hard to find doctors who aren't actually working from 8-12, and a lot of the teachers are residents and once they finish tend to travel elsewhere to do fellowships and etc. I agree Path is set up poorly, but to my knowledge not a lot of people in my class want to be pathologists, and just like anything else if its what you want to do you'll learn about it more outside of class. Plus path is hard to teach because its basically slides and gross specimens that are hard to get "your hands on" in a powerpoint lecture format. And it was to my understanding that the new multimillion dollar complex was built from donations made by dmu alumni, though I could have been misinformed about that, and I don't know too many alum, but the ones I do know don't say too many negative things about DMU. Like always we are a product of our envirnoment and surroundings so I'm sorry you dislike dmu so much, but at least at the end of the next two years you still get to be a doctor.
 
EMT_DO said:
Just wanted to se the record stright, I'm a third year at DMU, and had the full experience of what DMU has to offer. For those of you who say I'm a schmuck and don't know what I'm talking about and DMU is just the greatest school ever let me ask you this: 1. Why do they have such a difficlut time finding professors to teach 2nd year students? 2. Why are most alumni so unwilling to donate and completly disgusted with how DMU operates?
Why are certain classes. namely pathology, so poorly taught? Consider this when you call me a schmuck please.
Every university has some classes that could use some improvement. DMU is no exception. The path course is by necessity, boring. While path is an essential part of medicine, there is no way it can be presented other than how it is, it requires a lot of reading and looking at slides. Behavioral medicine is awful, but honestly if youre going to have a bad course, that should be it. What other med schools did you attend to compare to? Oh thats right, none. To all you 2009ers, dont worry about this person. DMU is a good school. No, it's not Harvard med school, or some super famous place, but if youre just going into med school to feed your ego, youre going to be miserable. I'm a second year, and except for one faculty that i can think of but will not name, nobody is preaching how great DOs are and how bad MDs suck. Thats complete bs, the school doesnt operate that way. Yes, we are proud to be DOs, why shouldn't we be? OMM is really cool, and even if you dont like certain treatment modalities (ie cranial) that doesn't make everything bad. Where are you getting information about alumni donations? Do you have a valid source or are you just pulling that out of nowhere. I have never heard of DMU having difficulty getting lecturers. This person is ignorant and rude. You guys should be proud to have been accepted to such a good school. You should be proud to be DO (and that doesnt mean you hate MDs or any bs like that). A lot of people applied here and you got in. The majority of people who try to get into med school do not succeed. Congrats 2009ers, you picked a great field to work in and a great school to learn it at.
 
<in a robot voice>
I am Awesome-O

Awesome-O desn't like people who trash talk their own schools.

That is lame
 
EMT_DO said:
Just wanted to se the record stright, I'm a third year at DMU, and had the full experience of what DMU has to offer. For those of you who say I'm a schmuck and don't know what I'm talking about and DMU is just the greatest school ever let me ask you this: 1. Why do they have such a difficlut time finding professors to teach 2nd year students? 2. Why are most alumni so unwilling to donate and completly disgusted with how DMU operates?
Why are certain classes. namely pathology, so poorly taught? Consider this when you call me a schmuck please.

I've been away, so I'm going to have to answer a few posts in one big post in the fashion of my favorite Serbian, Cliff:

1) I'm not sure which 3rd year EMT_DO is, but I have to agree with Eiko (and I interviewed her for pete's sake), he/she's angry but DMU isn't probably the real focus. We in the Psychological field call this projection. Take something more socially acceptable to be angry at, that you perceive you can control (DMU) better than something else in your life that is less soically acceptable to be angry at, and you percieve you have less control over (a significant interpersonal relationship), switch the focus from the socially unacceptable anger to the socially acceptable outlet, and you have projection.

2) Alumni Donations: I'll talk to the Alumi Affairs Donations coordinator, Mary Boyd, then I'll pump my sources at DMU that always tell me the scoop even when it isn't popular/on the street. I'll test the veracity of that comment.

3)Pride in Institution: I spent ten years busting my ass for the World's Finest Nuclear Navy, and the World’s Finest United States Marine Corps. I’ve traveled half the globe, known thousands of people, and been paid major dollars to perform leadership tasks that required some great degree of reflection. Out of all this experience comes one fundamental truth: LIFE IS WHAT YOU MAKE IT. I’ve worked side by side with guys doing **** jobs (washing dishes, cleaning bathrooms, wiping asses, feeding old people who drool and cough food all over you, low crawling through the dirt as a field medic, schlepping pills out to the entire geriatric population of Florida while missing calculus III lecture because they all decided to show up at 4PM) and seen people respond in one of two ways. You either decide life is good, and it’s all worth the struggle, or you decide to be a bitch. I was both a Nurse’s Aide, and a Pharmacy Tech in training with a guy named Timoney, and all he could do was fuss. The child of a rich family, he thought everything should be easy and fun. The same jobs he lambasted, I put on my mantle, filled my resume with and made it to the best goshdamn DO school in the world. I’ve been to COSGP meetings and listened to the SGA Presidents of other schools fuss about how their institution is run. DMU is it. If you don’t agree, let me quote some famous hippies: USA is my country my right or wrong…love it or leave it =>DMU is my school love it or leave it. We don’t need any nonhacking, trashtalking, silver spoon in my mouth beatches running us down.

4) Graduate Pride: Let me name a few of them who I personally know out in service in my United States Navy who will tell you what their Education has meant to them:

a) Captain Glen Duane Zausmer, United States Navy, Urologist, Brooke Army Hospital, San Antonio, TX: Clinical Faculty.

b) Commander Edward B. Jorgensen, United States Navy, Internal Medicine, Naval Hospital Pensacola, FL: Director Branch Medical Clinic, Pensacola.

c) Admiral Benjamin Gaumer, United States Navy Reserve, Family Practice, Iowa Health Systems Clinic, Indianola, IA: Deputy Fleet Surgeon, Atlantic Fleet Reserve. Sits on Board of Directors, Iowa Health Systems. Manages Clinic Practice in Indianola.


If you want an opinion about DMU from someone who’s been out in the field a while, and has some experience doing their job, Google these fella’s (especially the good Admiral).


5) MD’s: Who gives a damn? DMU isn’t looking to make MD’s. IF DMU was, it’d be U of Iowa. MD’s and DO’s come from two separate pools usually. I interview for admissions. I see who comes and who doesn’t. We’re looking for people (and by we, I mean “I” because I interview and make suggestions), who are more than just numbers. Average MCAT at DMU, 25. Average MCAT at any MD school, 30. That’s a whole world of difference.

Are we the second choice of people who wanted to be MD’s sometimes? Yes. However I don’t see that as breaking down, I see that as breaking through. Even if you never use OMM in your practice, the addition of the continued review of applied anatomy makes a lot of difference in how you perceive the human body, and how you understand the working of anatomy in a way that is fundamentally quite different from physiology. Further, the psychological benefits of being innately more comfortable touching patient through at least two years of touching a different classmate every week pays dividends far beyond the knowledge of how to fix a Rotated Left Sidebent Right Lumbosacral Complex.

Are OMM Specialists too histrionic at times? Yes. However, their sacred trust is to guard the “keys” to the profession. The history, the tradition, and the intrinsic uniquesness of DO’s comes from a departure in the 1800’s. PILLS ain’t all that there is to medicine. Touching a person has so many benefits to their health that you can’t quantify on a piece of paper. Being good at it, and knowing how to approach your patients because you’ve been one so often (during OMM labs) is nothing you can put a price on.


Finally, life is what you make it. I feel like the luckiest guy in the world. I was soundly rejected without interview from a lot of MD schools. In my desperation I started considering whatever that Osteopathy thing was that I’d heard about. Then I started noticing DO’s on staff. Then, the nicest guy in the world, Captain Zausmer, spent the time with me to explain what a DO was, and how I should go about applying to medical school. Up until that point, no doctor (MD or DO) had spent any time explaining anything at all to me. I was stabbing at random trying to become a physician, and this DO much like another doctor who’d fostered me in the past (Dr Jorgensen) made me feel like I deserved a chance. I found out what DO’s were, and had a second chance to do what I really wanted to do in the first place, be a PHYSICIAN. It wasn’t important to me ever what the letters were behind my name, only that I get to take care of people. I understood that to be an MD, then I learned that there were 10% DO’s in the world.

After 18 months here, this was nothing less than divine intervention for me to be here.

If you don’t feel the same way, you can call the college tomorrow AM and disenroll. We don’t need lukewarm DO’s who don’t know what they want out of life on the street.

6) Pathology: How the hell ARE you supposed to teach the disease process of every body system in one class and make it good? I don’t know. They did their best, we’re working on it. Coulda’ been a lot worse.

7) Clinical Faculty: THEY’RE FLIPPING DOCTOR’S MAN! Tons of our ilk are profit driven, and won’t leave their practice to teach, because they lose money doing it. The ones that do come are nice, care about us learning, and should be lauded. I want you to go out and try to teach anything (medicine, tax preparation, garbage collecting), and find staff to leave their job to take less pay while they teach other how to do it. I’ll tell you if the money isn’t equal, it’ll be HARD. Money talks.

I’ve frankly been impressed with the dedication of many of the clinical faculty. Even the ones I was bored with were trying as hard as they could. Which is more than I can say for me on a daily basis. Sometimes I’m just lazy, and don’t pay attention (or get out of bed) while these guys are trying their best to make topics like “multiple myeloma” or “prostate cancer” sound interesting for 50 minutes at a time. WHEW!


7) Schmuck: I don’t think you’re a schmuck. I think you’re shooting your mouth off parroting what you’ve heard other uniformed or misinformed students say. None of you probably took the “rumors” to the faculty or investigated them before deciding to pass them on. Don’t feel bad, 80% of the world responds this way. If you want people to believe you, please quantify your statements and footnote them with either web sources, or other journal articles. Give us evidence you’re not just running our school down based on something you heard someone you know say.

Sorry for the Shakespearean length of this post.
 
Portier said:
I've been away, so I'm going to have to answer a few posts in one big post in the fashion of my favorite Serbian, Cliff:

1) I'm not sure which 3rd year EMT_DO is, but I have to agree with Eiko (and I interviewed her for pete's sake), he/she's angry but DMU isn't probably the real focus. We in the Psychological field call this projection. Take something more socially acceptable to be angry at, that you perceive you can control (DMU) better than something else in your life that is less soically acceptable to be angry at, and you percieve you have less control over (a significant interpersonal relationship), switch the focus from the socially unacceptable anger to the socially acceptable outlet, and you have projection.

2) Alumni Donations: I'll talk to the Alumi Affairs Donations coordinator, Mary Boyd, then I'll pump my sources at DMU that always tell me the scoop even when it isn't popular/on the street. I'll test the veracity of that comment.

3)Pride in Institution: I spent ten years busting my ass for the World's Finest Nuclear Navy, and the World’s Finest United States Marine Corps. I’ve traveled half the globe, known thousands of people, and been paid major dollars to perform leadership tasks that required some great degree of reflection. Out of all this experience comes one fundamental truth: LIFE IS WHAT YOU MAKE IT. I’ve worked side by side with guys doing **** jobs (washing dishes, cleaning bathrooms, wiping asses, feeding old people who drool and cough food all over you, low crawling through the dirt as a field medic, schlepping pills out to the entire geriatric population of Florida while missing calculus III lecture because they all decided to show up at 4PM) and seen people respond in one of two ways. You either decide life is good, and it’s all worth the struggle, or you decide to be a bitch. I was both a Nurse’s Aide, and a Pharmacy Tech in training with a guy named Timoney, and all he could do was fuss. The child of a rich family, he thought everything should be easy and fun. The same jobs he lambasted, I put on my mantle, filled my resume with and made it to the best goshdamn DO school in the world. I’ve been to COSGP meetings and listened to the SGA Presidents of other schools fuss about how their institution is run. DMU is it. If you don’t agree, let me quote some famous hippies: USA is my country my right or wrong…love it or leave it =>DMU is my school love it or leave it. We don’t need any nonhacking, trashtalking, silver spoon in my mouth beatches running us down.

4) Graduate Pride: Let me name a few of them who I personally know out in service in my United States Navy who will tell you what their Education has meant to them:

a) Captain Glen Duane Zausmer, United States Navy, Urologist, Brooke Army Hospital, San Antonio, TX: Clinical Faculty.

b) Commander Edward B. Jorgensen, United States Navy, Internal Medicine, Naval Hospital Pensacola, FL: Director Branch Medical Clinic, Pensacola.

c) Admiral Benjamin Gaumer, United States Navy Reserve, Family Practice, Iowa Health Systems Clinic, Indianola, IA: Deputy Fleet Surgeon, Atlantic Fleet Reserve. Sits on Board of Directors, Iowa Health Systems. Manages Clinic Practice in Indianola.


If you want an opinion about DMU from someone who’s been out in the field a while, and has some experience doing their job, Google these fella’s (especially the good Admiral).


5) MD’s: Who gives a damn? DMU isn’t looking to make MD’s. IF DMU was, it’d be U of Iowa. MD’s and DO’s come from two separate pools usually. I interview for admissions. I see who comes and who doesn’t. We’re looking for people (and by we, I mean “I” because I interview and make suggestions), who are more than just numbers. Average MCAT at DMU, 25. Average MCAT at any MD school, 30. That’s a whole world of difference.

Are we the second choice of people who wanted to be MD’s sometimes? Yes. However I don’t see that as breaking down, I see that as breaking through. Even if you never use OMM in your practice, the addition of the continued review of applied anatomy makes a lot of difference in how you perceive the human body, and how you understand the working of anatomy in a way that is fundamentally quite different from physiology. Further, the psychological benefits of being innately more comfortable touching patient through at least two years of touching a different classmate every week pays dividends far beyond the knowledge of how to fix a Rotated Left Sidebent Right Lumbosacral Complex.

Are OMM Specialists too histrionic at times? Yes. However, their sacred trust is to guard the “keys” to the profession. The history, the tradition, and the intrinsic uniquesness of DO’s comes from a departure in the 1800’s. PILLS ain’t all that there is to medicine. Touching a person has so many benefits to their health that you can’t quantify on a piece of paper. Being good at it, and knowing how to approach your patients because you’ve been one so often (during OMM labs) is nothing you can put a price on.


Finally, life is what you make it. I feel like the luckiest guy in the world. I was soundly rejected without interview from a lot of MD schools. In my desperation I started considering whatever that Osteopathy thing was that I’d heard about. Then I started noticing DO’s on staff. Then, the nicest guy in the world, Captain Zausmer, spent the time with me to explain what a DO was, and how I should go about applying to medical school. Up until that point, no doctor (MD or DO) had spent any time explaining anything at all to me. I was stabbing at random trying to become a physician, and this DO much like another doctor who’d fostered me in the past (Dr Jorgensen) made me feel like I deserved a chance. I found out what DO’s were, and had a second chance to do what I really wanted to do in the first place, be a PHYSICIAN. It wasn’t important to me ever what the letters were behind my name, only that I get to take care of people. I understood that to be an MD, then I learned that there were 10% DO’s in the world.

After 18 months here, this was nothing less than divine intervention for me to be here.

If you don’t feel the same way, you can call the college tomorrow AM and disenroll. We don’t need lukewarm DO’s who don’t know what they want out of life on the street.

6) Pathology: How the hell ARE you supposed to teach the disease process of every body system in one class and make it good? I don’t know. They did their best, we’re working on it. Coulda’ been a lot worse.

7) Clinical Faculty: THEY’RE FLIPPING DOCTOR’S MAN! Tons of our ilk are profit driven, and won’t leave their practice to teach, because they lose money doing it. The ones that do come are nice, care about us learning, and should be lauded. I want you to go out and try to teach anything (medicine, tax preparation, garbage collecting), and find staff to leave their job to take less pay while they teach other how to do it. I’ll tell you if the money isn’t equal, it’ll be HARD. Money talks.

I’ve frankly been impressed with the dedication of many of the clinical faculty. Even the ones I was bored with were trying as hard as they could. Which is more than I can say for me on a daily basis. Sometimes I’m just lazy, and don’t pay attention (or get out of bed) while these guys are trying their best to make topics like “multiple myeloma” or “prostate cancer” sound interesting for 50 minutes at a time. WHEW!


7) Schmuck: I don’t think you’re a schmuck. I think you’re shooting your mouth off parroting what you’ve heard other uniformed or misinformed students say. None of you probably took the “rumors” to the faculty or investigated them before deciding to pass them on. Don’t feel bad, 80% of the world responds this way. If you want people to believe you, please quantify your statements and footnote them with either web sources, or other journal articles. Give us evidence you’re not just running our school down based on something you heard someone you know say.

Sorry for the Shakespearean length of this post.

:clap: Bravo 😍 Bravo :clap: :horns: 😍 😍 :clap:

Well said, well said, Portier.

Yes, and I do believe poor Emtdo is probably having an awful time at school for him/her to think they way they do. I'm sorry that it has been so hard emtdo, but this is a thread for people that have hopes and dreams concerning DMU... we're excited and thanking our Heavenly Father that we made it in to such a wonderful school.

Maybe we are a little naive in our excitement, but we chose this school based on the impression we got from when we visited there.

Heck, I turned down the opportunity of a Screenwriter job just to interview there, because I had researched the school so much and wanted to have a chance to go there.

I understand emtdo may have feelings of frustration and disappointment, but this thread is not the best place for him/her to be so... candid with them.
 
AwesomeO-DO said:
<in a robot voice>
I am Awesome-O

Awesome-O desn't like people who trash talk their own schools.

That is lame


Did you just fart awesom-O, ewww it smells too...........wait a robot can't fart..................
 
Ray....I teared up....that was....beautiful! 😍
 
Eiko said:
:clap: Bravo 😍 Bravo :clap: :horns: 😍 😍 :clap:

Well said, well said, Portier.

Yes, and I do believe poor Emtdo is probably having an awful time at school for him/her to think they way they do. I'm sorry that it has been so hard emtdo, but this is a thread for people that have hopes and dreams concerning DMU... we're excited and thanking our Heavenly Father that we made it in to such a wonderful school.

Maybe we are a little naive in our excitement, but we chose this school based on the impression we got from when we visited there.

Heck, I turned down the opportunity of a Screenwriter job just to interview there, because I had researched the school so much and wanted to have a chance to go there.

I understand emtdo may have feelings of frustration and disappointment, but this thread is not the best place for him/her to be so... candid with them.

Leave it to Private Portier to save the day again............america F**k yeah portier 👍
 
cremaster2007 said:
Leave it to Private Portier to save the day again............america F**k yeah portier 👍

I still haven't seen that movie, but I heard the puppet guy had a nice puppet bum...

Is that true?
 
Portier said:
I still haven't seen that movie, but I heard the puppet guy had a nice puppet bum...

Is that true?


hottest dude puppet ass I've ever seen, it should leave you drooling navy boy
 
cremaster2007 said:
hottest dude puppet ass I've ever seen, it should leave you drooling navy boy

Hotter than when I tie you up like you're a puppet and make you wear makeup?
 
Portier said:
Hotter than when I tie you up like you're a puppet and make you wear makeup?


I think you are having a flash back😉
 
cremaster2007 said:
I think you are having a flash back😉

I borrowed mr Ferentz the other night from astrotrain.
 
I can't believe how excited I am for the start of medical school... I'm so bad, I bought USMLE books and a cute pink stethescope yesterday, because I was so excited.

Eiko,
Forgive my delay and butting into the convo... I was given a stethescope as a gift over the holidays and I called DMU bookstore to make sure it was the right variety. If you have not looked into it, you may before tossing that receipt. The store recommends, someone correct if i'm wrong, at least a Cardiology III by Littmann. Other company's 'scopes i ain't exactly sure of. Just so's you know...

By the way, is there a nickname to give classmates, like roommates= roomies? Okay then, Matey, take care.
 
Mad Cow said:
I can't believe how excited I am for the start of medical school... I'm so bad, I bought USMLE books and a cute pink stethescope yesterday, because I was so excited.

Eiko,
Forgive my delay and butting into the convo... I was given a stethescope as a gift over the holidays and I called DMU bookstore to make sure it was the right variety. If you have not looked into it, you may before tossing that receipt. The store recommends, someone correct if i'm wrong, at least a Cardiology III by Littmann. Other company's 'scopes i ain't exactly sure of. Just so's you know...

By the way, is there a nickname to give classmates, like roommates= roomies? Okay then, Matey, take care.
um... besides one or two instances when you are listening to the heart in Physical diagnosis lab, it wont' really matter what stethoscope you have, just as long as you have one. Most will work just fine for BP's and lungs and heart, and during your one-on-one fake patient tests, the stethoscope is pretty much just a prop and you never really have time to listen for murmurs and pathology. So if it was free, take it, save the money for the bar 🙂 :laugh:
 
AwesomeO-DO said:
um... besides one or two instances when you are listening to the heart in Physical diagnosis lab, it wont' really matter what stethoscope you have, just as long as you have one. Most will work just fine for BP's and lungs and heart, and during your one-on-one fake patient tests, the stethoscope is pretty much just a prop and you never really have time to listen for murmurs and pathology. So if it was free, take it, save the money for the bar 🙂 :laugh:


I second that notion...............you don't need anything super expensive or special........wait to you are actually getting paid to do what you do to get the fancy ones.
 
Could you please tell me about Des Moines. I am from baltimore maryland and just trying to picture how des moines looks and feels compared to my home city and state. is des moines like farm land or is it pretty civil....
 
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