Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / Feb. 1, 1974, edition 1 / Page 2
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18 Promotions (Continued from page 1) ADVICE FROM THE EXPERTS—W. Sheppard and D.B. Fernie (seated at left), two loss control engineers from the Continental Insurance Co., visited Duke last week to evaluate the entire safety program and make recommendations to the medical center's Safety Committee. "The visit," said Marshall C. Fowler (standing), fire and safety coordinator, “was one of our efforts to develop safer working conditions for all employees." Also pictured is James L. Bennett Jr., executive assistant to the vice president for health affairs and chairman of the committee. (Photo by David Williamson) I OPEN HOUSE IN THE NEW NURSERY—Ihi hospital's Intensive Care Nursery got a facelift recently and faculty and staff were invited to drop by for the christening. The enlarged facility will now be able to accommodate more babies and more equipmentfor their care. A new X-ray room which adjoins the nursery is scheduled for completion in the near future. Above is the view from the nursing station. (Photo by David Williamson) Trading Post You may send ads to "Trading Post" Box 3354, Hospital. Ads are printed free, but we do not advertise real estate, personal services or commercial enterprises. Please give your home telephone number. Duke extensions will not be listed. FOR SALE--'74 Mustang II, metallic gray with vinyl top, 10,000 miles, standard transmission, bucket seats, plush carpet, AM radio. Must sell, leaving country, very reasonable. Call 477-4095 anytime. FOR SALE-Pepsi machine, three selections, accepts dimes and is in good working order, great for beer, $25. Call Susan Poulton at 489-8086 after dark. FOR SALE-Garrard turntable; Kenwood amplifier; AM-FM tuner, model 2020; and two medium speakers. Excellent condition and reasonably priced. Call 477-0744 after 6 p.m. FOR SALE“Yellow '66 Mustang hardtop, fully equipped except air, three-speed on the floor, 289 engine, $600. See at 714 Arnette Ave. after 5 p.m. YARD SALE-Saturday and Sunday, 12-5 p.m., refrigerator, stove, air conditioner, furniture and a multitude of household goods. 1016 Burch Ave., Durham. Call for directions or if interested in any of the maior appliances, 489-0904 days and 489-2 54 evenings. FOR SALE-Simmons full-size mattress and box spring, $30. Call 383-1927. FOR SALE OR TRADE-Bose 901 speaker system, three months old and Dual 1218 record changer, complete, one year old. Call 286-9832. The national average cost of maintaining one patient for one day in a community hospital has gone from $9.39 in 1946 to about $105.30 in 1972. for every person cared for as a hospital inpatient, six others are treated as hospital outpatients. NEW THEATRE PRESENTATION Durham's New Theatre will present Woody Allen's Play It Again, Sam on Feb. 1, 2, 8 and 9 at 8 p.m. In Erwin Auditorium, located at the comnr of Oregon St. and Erwin Road. Admission is $1.50. Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Medical Division, in Tennessee. Johnson received his B.S. degree in mathematics and M.A. degree in psychology from the University of Florida in Gainesville. He obtained his »Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., in 1966. He joiner^ ihe Duke staff in 1967 as assistant prjfessor of medical psychology and chief psychologist at Highland Hospital in Asheville. Kremer received his B.A. degree in 1956 from the University of Buffalo and M.D. from the State University of New York, School of Medicine in Syracuse in 1960. He came to Duke in 1960 to serve an internship and residency in medicine. In 1968 Kremer was appointed assistant professor of medicine at the medical center and in 1969 was named chief of the Division of Hematology at the Durham Veterans Administration Hospital. A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., Lieberman came to Duke in 1967 as a Special Fellow of the National Heart Institute in the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology. He is presently serving a five-year position as an established investigator for the American Heart Association. Lieberman is a 1959 graduate of Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. and received his Ph.D. in physiology in 1964 from the State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, in Brooklyn. A native of Charlotte, N.C., Mahaley received his B.S. degree from Wake Forest and M.D. and Ph.D. degrees in anatomy from Duke. Following an internship in surgery and residency in neurosurgery at Duke, Mahaley was appointed assistant professor in neurosurgery and in anatomy. Aside from his recent promotion, Mahaley is assistant professor of anatomy and associate director for graduate medical education. Mendell received his B.S. degree from McGill University in 1961 and Ph.D. in neurophysiology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge in 1965. Prior to his arrival at Duke in 1968 as assistant professor of physiology, Mendell served as instructor in the Department of Physiology at Harvard Medical School in Boston. Comments Inpatient Rehabilitation Unit APCA Robert A. Mebane was married to Elvira Booker McAdoo on Jan. 10 ... . LPN Richard C. Butler has resigned from the IRU to become a member of the DUMC security force . . . . RN Dorothy Burford has assumed the role of rehabilitation nurse clinician on the unit, with special concern for inservice rehabilitation nursing education .... RN Lillie Gentry has succeeded to the position of head nurse . . . . the IRU lost a dedicated night nurse in the October death of Margaret Howard, LPN. She had been a medical center employee since Januaj-y of 1969. Reporter: Mary C. Vittengl Outpatient Department Laboratory Charles and Mercedes Bowman wish to announce the birth of their daughter, Nicole . . Candiss Weaver is leaving to live in San Antonio, Texas. Reporter: Mercedes Bowman Heart Station Technicians Mary Rigsbee, Doris Bray and Dott Jones, recently attended a seminar for EKG technicians at the University of Tennessee College of Medicine, sponsored by the Memphis Chapter of the American Heart Association of Memphis Baptist Memorial Hospital. Reporter: Dott Jones A 1957 graduate of City College of New York, Mills received his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1964. He served as a post-doctoral fellow of the National Heart Institute in the Department of Physiology at Middlesex Hospital Medical School in London and was a special fellow at the University of California's Cardiovascular Research Institute in San Francisco. Mills came to Duke in 1968 as assistant professor of physiology and pharmacology. A native of LaCrosse, Wis., Schomberg came to Duke in 1968 as an assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology and physiology. He received his B.S. degree from the University of Wisconsin in Madison and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from Purdue University in Lafayette, Ind. From 1965-68, Schomberg was a United States Public Health Service Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Cambridge in England in the Department of Veterinary Clmical Studies. A 1956 graduate of Swarthmore College in Swarthmore, Pa., Widmann received his M.D. degree in 1960 from Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio. He came to Duke in 1971 as assistant professor of pathology and medical director of the Medical Technology Program. Since 1972, Widmann has held the position of assistant chief of Laboratory Service at the Durham Veterans Administration Hospital. Burch received his undergraduate training and M.D. degree at the University of Alberta in Canada. He came to Duke in 1969 as an assistant resident in neurology. A native of Portland, Maine, Davis received his M.D. degree from Duke in 1966 and served his internship and residency in internal medicine at the medical center. He is presently director of the Clinical Coagulation Laboratory at Duke. Gebel received his B.S. degree in biology from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J., in 1954 and M.D. degree in 1958 from Harvard Medical School in Boston. He came to Duke in 1964 as a fellow in the Cardiovascular Laboratory and instructor in cardiovascular physiology. Since 1966, Gebel has been in private practice in internal medicine and cardiology in Durham. A native of New York City, Kay received his M. Phil, and Ph.D. in vertebrate paleontology from Yale University in New Haven, Conn. In 1971 and 1972 Kay was a teaching assistant in physical anthropology and paleontology at Yale. A 1963 graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, Roses obtained his M.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1967. He came to Duke in 1970 as chief resident in neurology and since 1972 has been a fellow of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. A native of Lancaster, Pa., Strickler received his B.S. degree in zoology from Pennsylvania State University in 1963 and Ph.D. in anatomy from the University of Chicago. From 1970-72, Strickler did field work in Mexico and Newfoundland. Eubanks (Continued from page 1) I manager of the Wachovia branch in the hospital. He is a 1971 Duke graduate with a B.A. in history and business administration who, before assuming the hospital bank post, managed the Chapel Hill Blvd. Wachovia Bank branch. Sntcucom is published weekly ^or Duke University Medical Center eoiployes. faculty, staff, students and friends by the Medical Center's Office of Public Relations. Joe Sigler, director; Miss YvorHie Baskin, medical writer, Miss Annie Kittrell, secretary. Co-Editors DAVID WILLIAMSON DALE MOSES Public Relations Advisory Committee: Sam A. Agnelio, audiovisual education; Dr. Robert Anderson Jr., surgery; James L. Bennett Jr., vice president's office; Wayne Gooch, personnel; Dr. Athos Ottoienghi, physiology and pharmacology; Richard Peck, hospital administration; Ms. Julia Taylor, RN, nursing; Dr. Tom C. Vanaman, rnk:roblologY and immunology.
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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