Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / April 1, 1969, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
April Institution Planned For Carter Lectureship Woodhall (continued from page one) DR. WOODHALL Knight said, "that Dr. Woodhall, with his distinguished academic and profes sional accomplishments, administrative experience, and detailed knowledge of the university, will accept the chancellor ship for a limited period." Dr. Woodhall, professor of neuro surgery, organized the neurological ser vice of the medical center following his appointment here in 1937. He has served as dean of the School of Medicine and associate provost for medi cal affairs. He is a graduate of Williams College and received his M. D. degree from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1930. A two-week program on intensive nursing care of the premature and sick neonate is being held at Duke April 7-18. The state-supported program is pre sented for North Carolina registered nurses who have charge of such babies. Mrs. Kay Avant and Miss Celia Lam- per, both clinical specialists at Duke, will coordinate the program. They will present the basic physiology of the pre mature and sick neonate. Other speakers from Duke include Miss Muriel R. Carbery, dean of the Cornell University School of Nursing, will deliver the first annual Harriet Cook Carter Lecture here on Thursday night, April 10. The lecture on the theme, "Newer Dimensions in Nursing," will begin at 8:15 in Room 111, Biological Sciences Building. Dr. Myrtle Irene Brown, dean of the Duke School of Nursing and director of patient care at Duke Hospital, will pre side, and Dr. Barnes Woodhall, university chancellor, will deliver welcoming re marks. At 4 p.m. the same day, in Baldwin Auditorium on East Campus, the lecture ship will be instituted officially, with Mrs. James T. Cleland formalizing the naming in memory of Mrs. Carter. Mrs. James H. Semans, a member of the lectureship committee, will preside. President Douglas M. Knight will accept the lectureship for the university, and Dean Brown will speak briefly in re sponse. The intent of the lectureship is to hold in constant memory this compas sionate and unusually creative lady who endeared herself to Duke University and the Durham community through her wi despread activities." Mrs. Carter, wife of Dr. F. Bayard Carter, Duke's first chairman of obstetrics and gynecology, was a nurse, an honorary Dr. George W. Brumley, director of new born services at the hospital; Dr. Angus McBryde, professor of neonatology; Dr. Shirley Osterhout, associate in pediat rics; Dr. George M. Lyon, Jr., assistant professor of pediatrics and Dr. Ray Ford, chief resident in pediatrics. Miss Laura Harbison, maternal-child health nursing consultant with the State Board of Health, will speak on perinatal mortality. Sessions will be held in 327 Baker House and in the Intensive Care Nursery. member of the Alumnae Association of the Duke School of Nursing, co-founder of the Duke Hospital Auxiliary, an active member of the board of the Salvation Army and a participant in other civic activities. She died last Oct. II. "As Harriet Carter challenged the sm all to be great," the lectureship commit tee observed, "so this memorial is built upon a small unnamed lectureship started by the 1963 graduating class of the Duke University School of Nursing and will be expanded to encompass the breadth of her interests." Contributions continue to be received in the office of the dean. School of Nursing. Members of the permanent Harriet Cook Carter Lectureship Committee: are Miss Dottie Wilkinson, representing nur sing, chairman; Mrs. E. L. Persons, re presenting the Duke Hospital Auxiliary; Mrs. Banks Anderson Jr., representing the School of Nursing alumnae; Duke Hospital Chaplain Wesley Aitken; and Mrs. Semans and Mrs. Victor Bryant Sr., representing the Durham communi ty. Ex-officio members are Dean Brown and Ray Ingraham, her administrative assistant. Three-Day Program Planned on Diabetes A lecture series on diabetes mellitus is scheduled for April 15, 16 and 18 at the medical center. Two one-hour sessions will be pre sented each day during the series, spon sored by Patient Care Education. On April 15, Dr. Jerome Feldman, associate in medicine, will lecture on disease concepts of diabetes mellitus. On April 16 and 18, Edna Ketchi and Faye Moss, both R. N.'s with the re gional medical program, will speak on nursing care responsibilities regarding patients with diabetes. The morning sessions, set from 10:30 to 11:30, will be held in Room 3031. The afternoon programs each day will be held in Room 2031 from 2:00 to 3:00. State Nurses Participating In Duke Neonate Seminar
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 1, 1969, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75