■:v nteKcom duke univcRsity mc6icM ccnteR VOLUME 17, NUMBER 14 OCTOBER 16, 1970 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Terry Sanford Inauguration Planned Sunday With a flourish of academic pageantry, Duke University's sixth president, Terry Sanford, will officially be installed October 18. Some 60,000 printed invitations to the inauguration ceremonies were sent out earlier this month to individuals affiliated in some way with the University. These included faculty, students, employes, alumni, and other friends of Duke in ad dition to the members of the Board of Trustees and representatives of some 250 other colleges and universities. The actual inauguration is set for 3:30 p.m. Sunday on the main campus quad rangle with an informal reception fol lowing. An inaugural banquet is scheduled for Saturday evening, October 17, and a special chapel service and lunch eon are planned the day of the program. The ceremony will begin with an aca demic procession followed by the na tional anthem. The Rev. Robert E. Cushman, dean of the Duke Divinity School, will give the invocation, and Dean Kenneth Pye, University chancellor, will welcome guests. They will be followed by a series of "greeters" who will offer their welcome to the new president. They include repre sentatives of the Duke student body, the faculty, the Employe’s Council, alumni organizations, and the North Carolina Methodist Conference. Also on the pro gram are North Carolina Governor Robert Scott and Durham Mayor R. Wense Grabarek. After a blessing by the Rev. James Cleland, dean of Duke Chapel, Mr. Sanford will address the crowd. Mr. Sanford, who was governor of the state of North Carolina from 1961 to 1965, was named Duke's sixth president by the trustees last December. He as sumed his presidential duties in April. mkstAi iiifil ■ tllKlW” IH1111 • H M PERSONNEL'S NEW WOAff—Several offices moved into the new Personnel Building on Erwin Road this week. Shown entering the structure is Medical Center Employment Manager George May. (photo by Jim Wallace) Personnel Building Open The employment, wage and salary and training sections of the Medical Center personnel department have moved into their new quarters on Erwin Road. For the past several months the Med ical Center's wage and salary and training functions have been conducted from offices in the Pickens Rehabilitation Building after space limitations made necessary the temporary relocation of the employment offices. The new building, which is located ad jacent to the Hanes House Annex, was under construction for three months. It was completed last week. The building contains 1,700 square feet of space and provides working space for 13 employes. All employment procedures including interviews, testing and the preparation of pre-employment health records are being conducted in the new facility. A parking area at the rear of the new building provides space for 20 auto mobiles. MOVING //V—Anne Gutknecht and Employe Health and Student Health, Jane Lupton get their offices in order at formerly located at the hospital, are the new Personnel Building, (photo by occupying the space in the Pickens Build- Jim Wallace) ing vacated by the employment division.