N T E R C O 3-5^ DUKE UNIVERSITY nSnL'faSp" rMirnr MEDICAL CENTER ^ii 1 Bll b ~ ~ Ik Lfflll VOLUME 14, NUMBER 1 SPRING, 1967 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Gifts Galore! The Pink Smoek, the Auxiliary’s new gift shop, is open for business! Located on the first floor of the new Main Entrance Building, the gift shop faces the waiting room area. Auxiliary volunteers went to A"ew York on two buying trips to select items for the shop. They sought the luuisual, the unique and the inexpensive. (And they are keeping their sources a secret!) Items for sale include baby gifts, stationery and cards, children’s toj’s and books, toiletries, jewelry, small accessories, ceramics, copi^er enamelling, and flowers on order. All are invited to come browse and buy! [Note: The Pink Smock gift shop sign (above) was designed by Elon II. Clark with Bob L. Blake, both of the Medical Art Sec tion of the Division of ATidiovisual Education.] Dr. Kotin New Assistant Dean Dr. Helen Tepper Kotin join ed the administrative staff of the School of Medicine in February and is filling the newly created post of assistant dean for re search. Before coming to Duke, Dr. Kotin was with the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md., as special assistant to the director of the division of bio logic standards, a position she had held since 1963. A native of Denver, Colo., she received her B.A. from the L"ni- versity of Colorado and was awarded her ]\I.D. from the Uni versity’s School of iledicine. For eight years she was assistant director of maternal and child health at the Los Angeles Coun ty Health Department, Los Angeles, Calif., and later was a physician with the Los Angeles City Board of Education. The move to North Carolina and Duke University was initi ated when Dr. Kotin’s husband. Dr. Paul Kotin, accepted the position of director of the En vironmental Health Science Cen ter, a division of the U. S. Pub lic Health Service now located in the Research Triangle. The Kotins have two sons. Their oldest son, Joel, 25, is at tending Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston; he is married and is the father of two. Their second son, David, 20, is a so])homore at the University of Wisconsin. REHAB I TO CEMENT RELATIONS WITH BAKER HOUSE When the new tliree-story Rehabilitation Facility (I’hase (1) is finished next fall, over 1,000 cubic yards of cement will have travelled in the “bucket” shown above. For those who had a chance to do some “sidewalk superintending” during the early stages of construction, the above scene is a familiar one. Soon after this picture was taken, the immense bucket was “hoisted” to the top floor of the building, and was really something to see “in flight.” Filled, the bucket weighs over 3,000 pounds, and when it swings up with only a crane and an operator on the other end of it, it surely does strike (pardon) a most impressive pose! The new Rehab Facility will connect to Baker House, and at last Baker House residents (not to mention Housekeeping employees) will have an elevator at their disposal! The elevator will be located in the Rehab Facility, but it will serve both buildings. Photo by Richard McKee