1 ntcucom duke univcRsity mc6icM ccntcR VOLUME 22, NUMBER 27 JULY 18,1975 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Sims: More Than a Woman's Surgeon The following article is being reprinted from an address delivered by Dr. Robert S. Sparkman, Chief of the Department of General Surgery, Baylor University Medical Center in 1974. It is one of a continuing series of articles on the men for whom the wards of Duke Hospital were named. The first child of Jack and Mahala Sims was born on January 25, 1813, on a farm in Lancaster County, South Carolina. They named him James Marion in honor of Carolina’s revolutionary hero. General Francis Marion, the Swamp Fox. Jack Sims had little money and no forrpal education, but he was ambitious and enterprising. In 1825, seeking a better opportunity, he moved with his family to Lancaster where he achieved enough success as a tavern keeper, surveyor, and sheriff to educate his son. Marion was an undistinguished student. After an education of sorts in rural schools and in the new Franklin Academy in Lancaster, he enrolled in 1830 in South Carolina College at Columbia. He graduated in 1832 and returned to Lancaster. As a college graduate he was expected to enter one of the professions. His father wanted him to be a lawyer, while his mother wanted him to be a minister. He chose medicine as a career, not because he liked it, but because the alternatives of law and the church appealed to him even less. His choice was a disappointment to both of his parents. He began by reading medicine with an indifferent preceptor. Dr. Churchill Jones, in Lancaster. In 1833 he attended a three-month course of lectures in Charleston at the new Medical College of South Carolina. After additional reading in Lancaster he enrolled in the Jefferson Medical College in w RECEIVES GRANT—Dr. D. Bernard Amos recently accepted a $1,500 grant from North Carolina ACS Special Projects Chairman Dr. Warren H. Cole. Dr. William W. Shingleton, right, is director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center here. Amos Awarded Cancer Grant For Fall Lectures, Symposium Three guest lecturers and a half-day symposium this fall will be products of a $1,500 American Cancer Society grant recently presented to Dr. D. Bernard Amos, chief of the Division of Immunology. Amos, whose work in immunology and genetics won him this year’s Albion O. Bernstein, M.D., Award from the Medical S(x;iety of New York, is involved in research to discover the way in which the body’s immune system fights cancer. “I want to find out what the body’s defenses against cancer really are,” Amos said. “ I'he body attacks cancer cells in two ways — with antil>odies and with lymph(x;ytes. “Either can be effective. But if things go wrong, they can prevent each other from acting. We need to know how they work and interact with each other.” The upcoming lectures to be sponsored by the grant will feature topics on “Herpesvirus and Cancer,” “Immunology and Timiors” and “Carcinoembryonic Antigen.” The symposium will feature three speakers with topics tentatively planned to include: “Viral Susceptibility to (dancer,” “Immune System Surveillance” and “Immunotherapy." rhe programs, designed for a general medical audience, will also be open without charge to the lay public. Philadelphia, where he spent a year. He graduated in 1835 and returned to Lancaster to practice. His experience there was a disaster. In two months he had only two patients: both were infants, and both died of cholera infantum. In desperation, Sims packed his belongings and fled westward to Alabama. During the next five years a number of things happened to influence his career profoundly. He established a successful practice at Mount Meigs, a few miles east of Montgomery. Malaria was endemic there, and before long Sims was debilitated by recurrent bouts of fever. (Continued on page 4) DR. JAMES MARION SIMS Appointments, Promotions Cite Seven Faculty Members Five appointments and two promotions at the medical center have been announced by Dr. Frederic N. Cleaveland, university provost. Dr. Joannes H. Karis has been named professor of anesthesiology, and Drs. Robert J. Bache and David F. Paulson have been promoted to associate professorships in the department of medicine and surgery, respectively. Those receiving appointments to assistant professor are Dr. David C. Deubner in community health sciences. Dr. Ronald B. Flasley in medicine. Dr. Markku Linniola in psychiatry and Dr. Calvin R. Peters in surgery. Karis, a native of Schiedam, Holland, earned an M.D. degree from the State University of Utrecht in Holland in 1952 and an Arts degree from the State University of Leiden, also in that country, in 1956. He served a rotating internship at New York City Hospital from 1952-53 and a residency in anesthesiology at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, N. Y., from 1957-59. Between 1960 and the present, Karis rose from instructor to associate professor of anesthesiology at Columbia University in New York City. Before his appointment at Duke, he also served as medical director of the Inhalation Therapy Department and associate director of the Surgery Anesthesiology Intensive Care Unit at New York’s Presbyterian Hospital. Bache, who is an associate in physiology as well as associate professor of medicine, earned B.A., B.S. and M.S. degrees at the University of North Dakota and then an M.D. from Harvard University Medical School in 1964. He completed a medical residency at hospitals affiliated with the University of Minnesota in 1967, and then in the same year, came to Duke as a U.S. Public Health Service Officer. Following several years as fellow in cardiology at Duke and at the University of Minnesota, he was named assistant professor of medicine here in 1971. After receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree and an M.D. from Duke in 1960 and 1964, respectively, Paulson served an internship and assistant residency in surgery at Duke Hospital. From 1966 to 1969, he was clinical associate at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md., and then he returned to Duke to complete his residency in urologic surgery. Paulson was named to the faculty here as instructor in 1971. In January of 1972, he was named assistant professor of surgery and director of urologic research at Duke and the ?)urham Veterans Administration Hospital. Deubner earned a B.A. degree from Stanford University in 1966 and his medical degree from the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry in 1971. After completing an internship at the Latter-Day Saints Hospital in Salt Lake City, Utah, in 1972, he went on to finish a master’s degree in public health at the University of North Carolina and a residency in medicine at the Center for Disease Control. Upon receiving a B.S. in chemistry from Oklahoma Baptist University, F.asley entered the University of Oklahoma where he earned the M.S. (Continued on page 2)