University of Oklahoma. Tulsa Medical College
Organization
Senate Bill 453 was passed in 1972 to create the Tulsa Medical College, a clinical branch of the OU College of Medicine. The first 17 medical students began classes in Tulsa in 1974. Governor Henry Bellmon signed legislation in 1989 to change the name of the Tulsa Medical College to the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine-Tulsa. Along with the College of Pharmacy and College of Education, the College of Medicine-Tulsa moved into the Schusterman Center in 2000. The College of Medicine-Tulsa changed its focus in 2008 after the George Kaiser Family Foundation made a $50 million gift to improve the health of Oklahomans through community-based medicine. The College of Medicine-Tulsa became the first School of Community Medicine in the nation. Later that same year, the Physician Assistant program began through pernership with the University of Tulsa (TU). OU officially partnered with TU in 2009 to create a four-year medical school in Tulsa, to be called the OU-TU School of Community Medicine. The name was officially changed when the first class of four-year medical students began classes in 2015.
Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:
OU-Tulsa Oral History Collection
Collection — Hard Drive: 1
Identifier: SCHU-OH
Content Description
This collection contains the oral history of The University of Oklahoma-Tulsa. The collection materials consist of digital files including interview videos, interview audios, transcripts, and photos.
The Oklahoman
Sub-Series — Box: 1, Folder: 18
Identifier: SCHU-SL-01-018
Description
The series consists of serial publications (such as magazines or loose "floppy" journal issues), articles, reports, and newspaper clippings regarding the history of OU-Tulsa. Note that thicker bound publications may be arranged within the Books series instead.