Important Notices
Interviews:
The Health Professions Committee will grant
interviews to applicants who meet the following criteria and
have completed their file:
Medical
Applicants must have a minimum cumulative science/math
and overall GPA of a 3.0 and a minimum MCAT test score of 25.
Students requesting an interview before an MCAT score is
available, require a minimum 3.3 GPA.
Dental
Applicants must have a minimum cumulative science/math
and overall GPA of 3.0. Minimum DAT scores are a 16 in the
Academic Average section and a 15 in the Perceptual Ability
Section. Students requesting an interview before DAT scores are
available, require a minimum 3.3 GPA.
Important:
There is a September 30th deadline for putting your name on the
waitlist for an interview. If you put off taking the
appropriate admissions test for the first time, and you will not
have test scores before September 30th, you will not qualify for
an interview this year. (note, there is a 4 week wait for MCAT
scores).
All students who meet the academic
requirements, must request a prequalifying review once they have
submitted an autobiography and a minimum of two letters of
recommendation have been received. Once the file is reviewed
AND completed, the student's name will be placed on the interview
waitlist.
Note: Qualifying for an interview does not
guarantee you an interview slot. Additionally, procrastination
can hurt you because there are a finite number of interview slots.
Why are so
many people interviewed late in the cycle? Because they didn't have
enough letters of recommendation.
Releasing
Letters of Recommendation:
Beginning with the 2007 application
cycle, new procedures for releasing letters of recommendation were
instituted and new release forms generated. At the schools'
request, Allopathic, Osteopathic and Optometry releases will be done
electronically for most schools; material to all the other schools
will be mailed. Once uploaded, schools can view material instantly,
but no new material can be added.
As always, the release of letters of recommendation is not
automatic, nor is it instantaneous. Students are advised to submit
their release forms at least one week before deadlines. REQUESTS FOR RELEASE CANNOT BE
HONORED WITHOUT A
SIGNATURE.
Applicants to allopathic medical schools need to submit their AAMCAS
form
as close to June 1st as possible. Note: it may take you longer than you think!!!
Did you
know that medical school admissions officers will call the Health
Professions Office to find out why there is no committee statement
for an applicant to their school?
Invitations for an interview at a medical school REQUIRE a response. It is rude
not to respond, and it is even worse to schedule an interview and
not show up for it. Be honest and courteous, it will take your
further.
Completing Your File
-
At least 5 Letters of Evaluation
-
Disciplinary Clearance Waiver
-
Photograph
-
Autobiography
-
PreQualifying review -- NEW REQUIREMENT
Reapplicants
Your Health Professions Interview
-
What is Expected of You
-
What You Can Expect of the
Interviewer
-
What Happens Next
-
Sample Questions for the Health
Professions or Medical School Interview
-
Questions the Student May Wish to Ask
at at Medical School Interview
The Application
Releasing Your Health Professions Packet
Completing Your File

Letters of Evaluation
Students are required to obtain a minimum of five
letters of evaluation. At least three letters must be from faculty with
two of them from science instructors (one letter must be from a member
of the student’s major department; in addition, it is strongly suggested
that one of these be in the Life Sciences). Additional letters may come
from employers and supervisors, particularly if the work was in research
or a medically related area.
Students are required to have an evaluation submitted by their research
advisor and a letter confirming that they have participated in health
care (voluntary or paid work).
Whenever possible, letters of evaluation should be
solicited from professors rather than teaching assistants. A file
consisting solely of letters from teaching assistants will have less
credibility with medical school admissions committees.
Those references of significant value to students
are written by faculty to whom the student is known. To improve the
types of letters that come into the office, students should solicit
letters of evaluation from faculty members with whom they have
established a good rapport and in whose class they did well.
A one page resumé will help the recommender write a
meaningful letter.
Disciplinary Clearance Waiver
All students must sign the Disciplinary Clearance
Waiver (available in the HPO) if they plan to request a Health
Professions Committee interview or the forwarding of confidential
letters of recommendation/evaluation to other institutions. Once the
student signs the waiver, the appropriate Dean of Students can disclose
to this office whether there is or has been any disciplinary action
taken against an individual.
Photograph
Students seeking a Health Professions Committee
interview must have an informal photograph in their file. A Polaroid
snapshot can be taken in the office at any time. Students who wish to
submit a photo of their own are free to do so.
The Autobiography
(minimum
length requirement: 2 pages if single-spaced, Maximum length
requirement: 5 pages if single spaced)
What should I write:
An autobiography is, by definition, the story of one’s life – that is
basically what you should write (remember your life didn't start in high
school). Unlike the limited space in which you must write a
personal statement when you apply to professional schools, this essay
can be as long as five pages, but must bat least two full pages. Note that it is for the use of the Health Professions Office and
Committee and is not forwarded elsewhere. The points to cover in your
essay are as outlined below:
Your Chosen Field:
When, how, under what influences did you decide to pursue a career in
medicine or other field? Did some special event or circumstance
influence you? What have you done to become better informed about your
intended field? Have you done volunteer health care work, had a paid
job in health care, or shadowed a professional? Mention family
influences (i.e., my Mom’s a physician) or even a sick relative or
friend for whom you have provided care.
Research Experience:
It is not necessary to have done research as an undergraduate, but a
great many students have participated to a greater or lesser extent. If
you have carried out research or will do so in the coming year, provide
a brief description and state what you gained or expect to gain from
it. If you have done an honors project, either departmental or college,
note it. If you will see your name on a publication, state in what
journal. Be sure that you fully understand what you have done and the
reason for doing it. Don’t be embarrassed in the future by a question
about your research which you cannot answer, or discuss from a position
of knowledge.
Community
Activities: Your community includes college as well as your home
town. Talk about your clubs and activities. If you have held
leadership positions or taken a leadership role in some activity,
describe it, but don’t try to glorify yourself. Write about your health
care experience – it is important to know that you have been in a
professional environment and can imagine yourself in that setting in the
future. Other community activities also “count”, service in your
church, school, local service clubs, and so on.
Recreation and
Entertainment: How do you spend your free time? Do you have a
life? It is necessary that you present yourself as a well rounded
person with interests in something other than high grades and good MCAT
scores. Do you read? What was the last book you read that was not
required for a course? Are you physically active? Don’t try to be all
things, but be more than simply a strong student. Interactions with
people are important. After all, the field which you wish to enter
involves very close contact with others.
Writing Style:
The format is up to you. It does not have to be especially formal nor
does it have to be great prose. It does have to be grammatically
correct, well organized, and clearly written. Think of this as an
opportunity to tell about yourself in such a way that your interviewer
can get to know you before your formal interview. This essay is a
chance to explain any problems in your grades or MCAT scores – maybe you
had a bad semester which needs to be explained. Your statement provides
a chance to think about who you are and why a professional school should
accept you over another candidate. It will help the interviewer write a
better and more informative letter if you provide the information.
After all, “this is your life,” and you will be judged on how you have
used it so far.
Books that can
help: The HPO has several books with chapters on how to write an
autobiography. We also have several copies of the book
Write for Success, Preparing a
Successful Professional School Application by Evelyn W. Jackson,
Ph.D. and Harold R. Bardo, Ph.D., which many students find helpful.
Pre-Qualifying Review
Applicants can and should meet with an advisor in order to pre-qualify for
an interview in the spring prior to their application. This meeting is independent of the interview, and it is
informal. The advisor will review your file in your presence, and
will discuss any areas of weakness. In this way, you will have time to
strengthen your file before you schedule your interview. While it is
mandatory that you pre-qualify before your interview, it is not
necessary to so in person. As long as you have two letters and
your autobiography in your file, your file can be reviewed by an advisor
in the HPO and you will be notified by email if you qualify for an
interview.
For those who qualify, HP interviews will run from March 15, 2005
through May 31st, 2007 for 2008 applicants who have already taken the MCAT or who will be taking
one of the sessions of the MCAT in January or April. There will be very few
interviews granted in the month of June because the staff are already
booked for that month. Students who will be taking one of the sessions the MCAT
in May, June, July or August may
not schedule an interview before July 1st
Reapplicants
You need to meet with an advisor to determine, if
possible, why you were not accepted this past year and what you need to
do to improve your chances. In all probability, you will not require a
new Health Professions Committee Interview.
You must update your Health Professions file so
that we can update your Composite Statement. You are required to obtain
at least one new letter of recommendation either from someone who has
taught you this past semester or someone for whom you have worked,
and you need to amend
your autobiography highlighting what you have done the past year to
improve your qualifications for admissions.
You need to complete your application forms
early. Keep
in mind that the earliest you may submit your allopathic or osteopathic
application is approximately June 1. A late application may negatively
affect your chances.
Do not simply resubmit last year’s material to the
application services. It sends the message that your application is not
important enough to you to warrant your taking the time to update it.
Schools retain your previous applications for later comparison.
Your
Health Professions Interview
Never allow yourself to be interviewed without adequate preparation. It
speaks volumes about your desire to be a physician/dentist when you are
unable to speak intelligibly about topics about which all premeds or
predents should at least be aware (i.e. current events, medical/ethical
issues). In addition, what type of message do you think is conveyed
when you are unable or unwilling to ask questions or answer the “Why our
school” question?
What is Expected of You
C You
are expected to dress as you would for a job interview.
C
You are expected to be aware of what
is currently going on in the field of medicine. There is a current
events bulletin board outside the HPO and a current events binder inside
the HPO.
C
You most likely will be asked
medical-ethical questions which quite often have no right-or-wrong
answer, but students are expected to pick and defend a position. In
order to afford students the opportunity to learn more about
medical-ethical issues currently facing the health professions, the HPO
has purchased several videos covering some of these topics.
CQuestons
about your grades or autobiography may be asked.
C
Questions about research you have done may be asked, so brush-up on or
find out about the work that was done in the lab.
C
Scroll down for sample interview questions.
What You Can Expect of the Interviewer
C
The interviewer may keep you as long as an hour; even more on occasion.
C
The interviewer will have reviewed your complete file before the
interview.
C The interviewer
will write a composite letter about you which will be submitted to the
schools to which you apply. The preparation time of this letter varies
from committee member to committee member; feel free to ask the
interviewer about his/her turn-around time. Additionally, if the
interviewer feels that s/he needs to put off completion of your
composite statement until receipt of your MCAT scores or other
material, it will affect turn-around time. If you recently took the
MCAT and the scores are not yet available, you should ask your
interviewer if s/he plans on holding-off completion of your composite
statement until the scores are received.
What Happens Next
C You
should complete a Release Form in the HPO. Please keep in mind that it
is seldom, if ever, possible to release materials immediately; there is
usually about a one to two week delay between receipt of your request
and the actual mailing of your materials. Additionally, from July
through October, when student release requests are at a peak, the
preparation time can be a bit longer. Remember to plan ahead and turn in
your forms in a timely manner.
C
Be aware that some schools will shred materials received about
applicants who do not have a file already at their institution.
Therefore, wait until after you have begun to receive secondary requests
before completing a release form.
Sample
Questions for the Health Professions
or
Medical School Interview
C
Tell me about yourself. This questions is usually looking to set the
student at ease, to find out when and why they decided on a medical
career, their interests in medicine, etc.
C
What health care experience have you had? Did you enjoy it?
C
What do you think about the health care system in the U.S.? What do you
think needs to be done?
C
What are your thoughts about or what do you know about: abortion,
assisted suicide, right-to-die, AIDS, tuberculosis, managed care, HMOs?
C
What do you do in your spare time? What do you do for relaxation? What
clubs have you joined? Have you held any offices?
C
Can you explain this/these grade(s)?
C
What courses did you like/dislike the most? What was the
hardest/easiest?
C
What kind of practice do you think you would like? Where? What
specialty?
C
What personal qualities should a good physician possess? Do you think
that you possess these qualities?
C If you
aren’t admitted to medical school admitted this time, what are your
plans? Suppose you’re never admitted ?
C Why
did you apply to this medical school? Is it your first choice, or what
is your first choice?
C Describe
your research. Your job. Your family.
C
Do you read other than course assignments? What do you read? What is
the last book that you read?
C Do
you have any questions of me?
Sample interview questions taken from Kaplan’s
Medical School Admissions
Workbook.
Refer to www.studentdoctor.net for comments
provided by hp student interviewees nationwide. Feel free to add your
comments to the database after any and all of your interviews.
Questions the Student May Wish to Ask at a Medical School Interview
C
Are there opportunities for students to design, conduct, and publish
their own research?
C
Is there flexibility in the course work (the number of electives) and
the timing of the courses (accelerating, decelerating, and time off)
during the pre-clinical and clinical years?
C
How do students from this medical school perform on the National Board
Examinations? How does the school assist students who do not pass?
C
How are students evaluated academically? How are clinical evaluations
performed?
C
What kind of academic, personal, financial, and career counseling is
available to students? Are these services also offered to their
spouses?
C
Is there a mentor/advisor system? Who are the advisors--faculty
members, other students, or both?
C
How diverse is the student body?
C
Tell me about the library and extracurricular facilities.
C
Are there computer facilities available to students? Are they
integrated into the curriculum/learning?
C What
type of clinical sites — ambulatory, private preceptors, private
hospitals, rural settings — are available or required? Does this school
allow for students to do rotations at other institutions or
internationally.
C Is
a car necessary? Is parking a problem?
C Is
there budgeting & financial planning assistance?
C What
medical school committees (e.g., curriculum committee) have student
representation?
C
Are students involved in (required or voluntary) community service?
C Does
this school provide vaccinations against Hepatitis B or prophylactic AZT
treatment in case of a needle-stick or accident?
C
May I see a list of residency programs to which recent graduates were
accepted?
Questions extracted from a publication of The
Organization of Student Representatives of the Association of American
Medical Colleges entitled “31 Questions I Wish I Had Asked.”
The
Application
First things first
· If you qualify for a Fee
Waiver, complete and submit applications and supporting documentation.
· Submit transcript request
forms to the Office of Records and Transcripts in the Administrative
Services Building, Busch Campus as soon as your Spring Grades are
posted. Be sure to have a copy
of your transcript sent to you as well. You will need the copy
in order to complete the application. In addition, you should check to
make sure that everything on your transcript is correct.
· Allopathic school applicants
may obtain copies of the above forms at the following URL: www.aamc.org/students/amcas/fap.htm.
· Osteopathic medical school
applicants may obtain copies of the above forms at the following URL:
www.aacom.org and follow the links to the AACOMAS (which is the actual
application).
· Dental school applications
are available at aadsas.app@aads.jhu.edu.
· Physican Assistant
applications can be obtained at www.caspaonline.org
· Podiatry applications can be
found at www.aacpm.org.
When Should I Submit My Medical School Application:
· If you have already taken the
MCAT exam and know your scores, be sure that your scores have been
released to the appropriate service(s). Submit the application as close
to June 1 as possible; do not submit it any earlier because it will be
returned to you.
· If you took the MCAT in April
and are awaiting receipt of your scores, expect them in mid-June; you
may wish to wait until they are received before applying. As long as
you mail your material before August, you will be early enough.
· If you plan on taking the
August MCAT, your scores will not be received by you or the medical
schools until mid-October. You should not wait for the receipt of your
scores to submit your application. It is suggested that if you are
taking the August MCAT file their applications before September and have
their committee interview so that the only thing missing is your MCAT
report.
The Application Form Itself
The earliest that any of the applications can be
submitted is near or on June 1st (because of the large
volume of applicants, AMCAS may again be forced to stagger the earliest
submission date— see the website for details). It is generally
recommended that students apply on or near to that date. There are some
exceptions though: students who have not yet taken the MCAT, students
who need to complete requirements over the summer, students who need
summer courses to improve their credentials, etc. If you are unsure
about when you should apply, contact us before the end of the Spring
term.
· Type the application and use
a font that is easy to read (nothing less than 10 point is
recommended).
· Proofread and Spell Check
it. Typographical errors are sloppy and may give the wrong impression
of you.
· Have someone else read and
critique your application. HPO advisors are willing to critique
penultimate drafts of your
personal statements but not the entire application.
· Above
all, be honest. Incorrect information, no matter how slight, may
well result in a negative outcome.
Grade Conversion:
The following comments pertain only to work done
here at Rutgers. For work done elsewhere, you may need to contact their
registrar’s office. 
· The number of semester hours
is equal to the number of credits.
· For grade conversion, use the
half-step system (letter “W” for AMCAS).
· Science courses are Biology,
Chemistry, Physics and Math. On occasion there are some courses which
overlap (i.e., physiological psychology). In these cases, students are
asked to consider the content of the course work rather than the
department which offers the course. If the content was more scientific
than not, list it as a science and vice versa. Be realistic, because
these application services have many undergraduate catalogues and can
easily check a course description. In the case of a discrepancy, your
application may be held up. If you are unable to make a determination,
give them a call.
· Engineering and Pharmacy
courses for the most part are considered technical and therefore
categorized as “all other” with the exception of the courses which fall
into the gray area described above.
· All applicants are required
to list, in chronological order, the name and location of each
institution attended. For this reason, if you regularly attend a
Rutgers-New Brunswick college and took a summer course on another campus
(Newark for example), you must distinguish between the two. You do not,
however, need to have two separate transcripts because all courses from
Rutgers University appear on your transcript.
· Any course taken more than
one time for which you did not get a “W” must be designated as a Repeat
(“R”). Even if you were assigned “E-credit” at Rutgers, you must list
every time a given course was taken and place an “R” in the “Type
Column”. All grades,
even if Rutgers does not calculate them into your GPA, must be included
in your AMCAS GPA.
· If you have received AP
credit for work done in high school, you must list the course with the
equivalent credits. Because no grade is assigned by Rutgers University
for such work, you must use the letter “G” for the AMCAS grade. Do not
submit test scores or high school transcripts to AMCAS as they do not
want them.
· If you have two or more
majors, use the appropriate AMCAS code: DM for Double Major NonScience,
DO for Double Major Science & Non Science, or DS for Double Major
Science.
The Personal Statement:
Generally, you should use as much of the area
provided for your personal statement as possible. Something too short
may give the impression that you did not give enough thought to the
statement. On the other hand, do not simply fill up space. This
statement is an opportunity to express why your application should be
considered above other applicants with similar or even better
credentials than yours.
Early Decision:
EDP or Early Decision Programs are recommended for
only a few people. While EDPs have good points, they also have some
serious drawbacks. You can apply to only one school and that school
does not have to notify you of their decision until October 1. If you
are not accepted, your applications to other schools are later than
most. Anyone considering EDP is strongly urged to speak with an HPO
counselor before committing him or her self.
Releasing Your Health Professions Packet:
Students
need to stop in at the HPO and sign a release form or download a copy of
the form from our website or submit a letter
authorizing the HPO to release your materials. Because of the federal
laws which protect the privacy of students, we cannot release anything
without your authorization. Keep in mind that it is not always possible
for the staff to release student materials immediately. Normally there
is a week delay; however, at out busiest times the wait may be longer.
It is the student’s responsibility to submit release forms to the office
in enough time to meet deadlines. All materials are handled on a
first-come/first serve basis.
Beginning with the 2007 Application cycle, the HPO
is sending letters of recommendation electronically to those schools who
participate in the VirtualEval program.
VirtualEvals
For the vast majority
of medical and optometry schools, the HPO is now releasing letters
electronically through the VirtualEvals system. For the participating
schools, the system enables the receivers to download material when they
are ready so we no longer have to worry about timing. Additionally,
VirtualEvals will send an email to the applicant confirming that their
material has been uploaded and providing a list of the participating
schools which will be able to view the student’s letters.
It is very fast, and
it is the method the participating schools prefer, but it does have a
drawback — material can only be uploaded once. This means that all the
letters must be received before anything is uploaded. Letters that
come in after your material has been uploaded will not be sent.
Paper
Evaluations
Dental schools, some
medical schools, and other health professional schools do not
participate in VirtualEvals, and material is sent to them in the
traditional way — U.S. mail. Timing is important as far as the release
of materials to these schools is concerned because several professional
schools have a policy of shredding materials received from applicants
who do not yet have admissions files in their institution. For this
reason, we suggest that you wait until you begin to receive
correspondence from the school(s) to which you are applying before you
authorize the release of your letters of recommendation. In general,
students should also check with each admissions office to make sure
their materials have been received unless a specific school has
requested that applicants refrain from calling. It is important that
you allow enough time for processing (2-3 weeks after your material has
been mailed by the HPO).
So, how do you know
which schools participate in VirtualEvals and which do not, The HPO has
produced a new release form and fee schedule which lists all the VirtualEvals schools
and all the non-VirtualEvals schools. Material to all non participating schools will
be processed through U.S. mail.
When
Is The Ideal Time
The ideal time to mail out letters is when you
start hearing from the schools themselves which is typically 4 weeks
after the submission of your primary application (AMCAS, AACOMAS, AADSAS…).
At this point, you can be sure that the schools are aware of your
interest and have a file on you. Do not be alarmed if you do not hear
from all the schools on your list; some schools do not send out
secondaries. It does not reflect their opinion of you as a candidate.
Once you start hearing from any of the schools, we recommend that you
mail your letters out to all the schools on your list.
Follow up
It is important to follow up. Call the HPO to find
out if and when your material was mailed out. Unless specifically
directed otherwise, we have found that it is best to wait two or so
weeks before checking on the status of your application at the
medical/dental school. Some schools receive a large volume of
applications which, when coupled with a cumbersome handling process,
can cause delays in processing. You certainly do not need to check so
often that you become a nuisance, so we would recommend that you wait an
additional two weeks before calling the various admissions offices.
HPO
Processing Fees
In order to equitably distribute the costs
involved in processing student applications to health professional
schools, the Health Professions Office is revamping their fee
structure. The new fee structure took effect 6/15/07.
Uploaded Letters of
Recommendation:
There is a flat $50.00 processing fee for releasing your letters to
allopathic medical, osteopathic medical, dental, or optometry
school. Therefore, whether you are applying to 1 or 30 schools,
the fee remains $50.00 for each type of school. With a few exceptions,
letters to these schools must be submitted electronically and require
special preparation and equipment.
Mailed Letters of
Recommendation:
Applicants to other health-related programs (i.e., podiatry,
chiropractic, pharmacy, physician assistant, physical therapy or
graduate schools), must be mailed and will be charged on a per
school/program basis as we have been doing -- $5.00 per school.
Undergraduate Programs:
There is no
charge for any Rutgers/UMNDJ undergraduate
research/internship/scholarship programs. There is a $5.00 per sheet
fee for all other similar off-campus programs.
Late Fees:
If you decide to release
your material to additional schools at a later date, there will be
no additional charge; however, if you need for us to send a different
packet (additional letters, committee statement, or different letters)
there will be another $50.00 processing fee. Additionally, there is a
$5.00 per school/program fee if we must fax your material.
We realize that the structure is a little
complex, but we believe it to more accurately reflect the work involved.
School Code Numbers
Please note, these codes are unique to the
Health Professions Office; you will not be able to find them
elsewhere.
In order to release your letters of
recommendation to any health professional school, simply submit a
signed and dated release form or letter to our office. It is also important that
you include either your phone number or email address (just in case
there is a problem). Please refer to the new HPO processing fees
above to determine what your fees will be then mail your
letter and check (which should be made payable to Rutgers, The State
University of New Jersey) to the following address:
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Health Professions Office
Nelson Biological Laboratories - Room A207
604 Allison Road
Piscataway, NJ 08854-8082
If there is a deadline looming, simply fax
the letter to us at (732) 445-6341 and put the check in the mail.
Finally, if you are applying through AMCAS,
AACOMAS, or AADSAS you must submit their respective ID numbers to the HPO. It must appear on all
supporting documentation.
Allopathic Medical Schools (M.D. Degree)
Osteopathic Medical Schools (D.O. Degree)
Foreign Medical Schools
Dental Schools
Podiatry Schools
Chiropractic Schools
Veterinary Schools
Optometry Schools
856 Ross University School of Medicine
857 St. Georges University Medical School
860 American University in the Caribbean
859 Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara
858 Sackler School of Medicine
Podiatry Schools
301 Barry in Florida
302 California
303 Osteopathic Medical Center in Iowa
304 Dr. William M. Scholl College of
Podiatric Medicine in Illinois
305 Ohio
306 Temple in Pennsylvania
307 New York
Chiropractic Schools
701 Life in Georgia
702 Palmer in Iowa
703 National College in Illinois
704 Palmer West in California
705 Los Angeles in California
706 New York
707 Western States in Oregon
708 Northwestern in Minnesota
709 Logan in Missouri
401 Alabama
402 Southern California
403 California at Berkeley
404 Nova in Florida
405 Illinois
406 Indiana
407 New England in Massachusetts
408 Michigan at Ferris State
409 Missouri-St. Louis
410 SUNY in New York
411 Ohio State
412 Northeastern State in Oklahoma
413 Pacific U. in Oregon
414 Pennsylvania
415 Southern in Tennessee
416 Texas at Houston
417 Inter American in Puerto Rico



