Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / Oct. 30, 1970, edition 1 / Page 2
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Provost Announces 12 Faculty Changes Twelve new associate professors have been named at the Medical Center by Duke Provost John O. Blackburn. Five of the faculty promotions came in the Department of Psychiatry, two in the School of Nursing, and one each in the departments of obstetrics-gynecology, ophthalmology, pathology, physiqlogy- pharmacology, and radiology. In psychiatry, moving from assistant professor to associate professor were Drs. Everett H. Ellinwood, Charles R. Keith, Charles W. Neville, and William W.K. Zung. Dr. Ellinwood, a native of Wilmington N. C., is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and its medical school. He did his residency in psychiatry at North Carolina Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill from 1960 to 1963 and came to Duke in 1965 following work with the U. S. Pub lic Health Service. Dr. Keith, who came to Duke in 1963, earned his A. B. and M. D. degrees from Kansas University and did a mixed intern ship at the Kansas University Medical Center. He completed his psychiatric re sidency at the Menninger School of Psychiatry from 1958 to 1961 and later did a fellowship in child psychiatry at Duke. Dr. Neville is medical director of Duke's Highland Hospital, a long-term psychiatric facility in Asheville, N. C. He joined the Duke staff in 1965 as an assis tant professor having formerly been a teaching fellow at the Harvard School of Medicine. He is a graduate of Vanderbuilt University and the Vanderbuilt Medical Intercom is published weekly for Duke University Medical Center employes, faculty, staff, students, and friends by the Medical Center Public Relations Office, Joe H. Sigler, director, and Vance B. Whitfield, assistant director. MRS. SUE CHILDS PR Associate and Intercom Editor MRS. KATHIE REISING PR Assistant MISS BARBARA RAY PR Secretary Editorial Committee: Sam A. Agnello, director of the division of audiovisual education; James L. Bennett, Jr., administrative assistant to the vice-president for health affairs; Willard McKiver, assistant in the Medical Center Personnel Office; Mrs. H. Shelton Smith, publicity chairman for the Duke Hospital Auxiliary; S. Douglas Smith, assistant director of the Hospital; and Miss Julia Taylor, R.N. School. He did his psychiatric residency at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass., and at the Beth Israel Hospital in Boston. A native of Shanghai, China, Dr. Zung received his B. S. degree from the University of Wisconsin and a bachelor of divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary in New York. He earned a master's at Trinity University in Texas and was awarded his M. D. from the Uni versity of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston in 1961. Following a rotating internship in New York, he came to Duke for a psychiatric residency. He has been an assistant professor since 1966. Mrs. Maurine Boie LaBarre has been promoted from part-time assistant pro fessor of psychiatric social work in the Department of Psychiatry to part-time associate professor. Mrs. LaBarre is a graduate of the University of Minnesota and earned her master's degree in socio logy there. She has a master of social work degree from Bryn Mawr College and has studied at the Pennsylvania School of Social Work in Philadelphia. She has been at Duke since 1960. The school of Nursing promoted Miss Theresa Elizabeth Horton and Miss Annie Sue Norville from assistant to associate professors. Miss Horton, a native of Salisbury, N. C., received her B. S. degree in nursing from Duke. and her master of nursing education from the University of Pitts burgh in 1963. She previously had taught at the Hartford Hospital School of Nur sing in Hartford, Conn., and the Uni versity of North Carolina at Greensboro's Department of Nursing. Miss Norville is a graduate of the Rutherford Hospital School of Nursing in Rutherfordton, N. C. and earned her B. S. degree at the University of North Caro lina in Chapel Hill. She received her master's in nursing at Emory University in Atlanta in 1965 and has taken post graduate work at the Johns Hopkins Med ical Center in Baltimore. She joined the Duke staff in 1966. Joining the staff of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology as an associate professor is Dr. Robert. G. Brame, for merly assistant professor at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston- Salem. Dr. Brame earned his B. S. and M. D. degrees at the University of North Caro lina and returned there for his ob-gyn residency following an internship at the University of Colorado. He had been a research fellow at the University of Virginia Hospital. Dr. Arthur C. Chandler was promoted from assistant professor ophthamology to associate professor in the department. Dr. Chandler is a graduate of Florida Southern College and received his M. S. degree from the University of Tennessee. He earned his M. D. at Duke in 1959 and remained here for a medical internship. Dr. Chandler completed his residency at the Institute of Ophthalmology at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City and then took a position on the staff of the Palo Alto Medical Clinic in California before returning to Duke. In the Department of Pathology, Dr. Williarp G. Bradford was named associate professor of pathology. Dr. Bradford has been as assistant professor in the depart ment since 1966. A native of Rochester, N. Y., he re ceived his A. B. degree from Amherst Col lege and his M. D. from the Western Re serve University School of Medicine. Fol lowing an internship and residency in pediatrics at Children's Hospital Medical Center in Boston, he serv/ed a pathology residency at the Boston Lying-In and Free Hospital for Women and the New England Deaconess Hospital. He came to Duke as a research fellow in pathology in 1965. Dr. Bradford retains his title as as sociate in pediatrics at Duke. Dr. Robert E. Fellows, Jr., has been promoted from assistant professor of physiology to associate professor. He retains his title as assistant professor of medicine. Dr. Fellows graduated from Hamilton College and the McGill University Faculty of Medicine before receiving his Ph. D. degree from Duke. He was previously a fellow in the division of endocrinology here. In radiology. Dr. Jack D. Davidson was appointed associate professor in the divi sion of nuclear medicine. Dr. Davidson received his A. B. degree in chemistry from Princeton University in 1940 and his M. D. from the Columbia University College of Physicians and Sur geons in 1943. He did his internship and residency at Columbia and was appointed assistant professor there in 1953. He came to Duke from a post as chief of the Department of Nuclear Medicine at the Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md.
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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Oct. 30, 1970, edition 1
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