Office of Public Relations P. O. Box 3354 Duke University Medical Center Durham, North Carolina 27710 I 2 3 4 S 6 r I 9 10 II 12 13 14 15 It 17 II It 20 21 22 23 24 2S 2t 27 21 . II n 20 21 22 23 24 U 2S 2( 27 21 29 30 31 July 15-23,1977 We would like to list lectures, symposia and other activities at the medical center in the Intercom Calendar. Notices can be accepted for the calendar no later than one week prior to publication. Notices may be sent to Box 3354, Hospital. If last minute scheduling makes it impossible to send a written notice in time, please call 684-4148. duke DNIVERSITY LIBRiEY PERIODICALS 119 PERKINS IIBRARY CABPUS HAIL Friday, July 15 1 p.m. Network for Continuing Medical Education (NCME). Program on "Drugs and Menopause: A Television Workshop." View in Rms M-405, M-410, 2031 and Medical Student Lounge (Channel 7 or 9) at Duke and Rms A3002 (by appointment only), C9013, D3008, CCU and classrooms and media learning lab of Allied Health Bldg. at VA Hospital. 12 no^^ ^ Pathology Research Conference. Dr. Kenneth McCarty Jr., Duke, will speak on “Hormonal Regulation of Differentiation I,' Rm M-204. 7:30 p.m. Ostomy Association, Epworth Methodist Church. Wednesday, July 20 Ip.m. NCME. See Fri., July 15 for program and viewing areas. 4:15 p.m. Summer Session Softball League, third term organizational meeting, Rm 104, Card Gymnasium. ^iT^a^' Night Shift Blood Pressure Clinic, Courtyard Dining Rm, until 3 a.m. Coffee and doughnuts served. Dr. Tindall Returns to Air Force Dr. John P. Tindall, professor of dermatology, resigned June 30 to return to active duty in the United States Air Force as a lieutenant colonel. Tindall, who joined the Duke faculty in 1966 and has been an Air Force reserve officer since then, will be stationed at the Royal Air Force Bentwaters base in southeastern Suffolk, England. He will serve as both flight surgeon and dermatologist with the USAF Medical Clinic at Bentwaters. Tindall said the four-year enlistment vvill allow him and his wife Daphne, who is a British subject, to be with their two children who are in boarding school in England. Sii Intercomments Ophthalmology Kerry B. Bell, has been promoted from secretary to clinic registration supervisor. Sharon Kingrey, secretary to Dr. A.C. Chandler Jr., and husband Joseph Kingrey have a new baby girl bom April 20. Repoiten Dariene McKinnon Pediatrics Anne Daughtridge, pediatric social worker, his joined the department and is working in the Intensive Care Nursery. RepoiteR Jackie McPheison Hematology-Oncology Dr. Rusael Kaufman, resident, and wife Jane Kaufman, assistant professor of nursing, have a new son, Jonathan Russel, bom May 20 and weighing 6 lb., 1 oz. (2.7 kg). Reporter Deborah Black Medical PDC Plains Ray, of the Medical Private Diagnostic Qinic insurance office, has Night Owls Sponsor to White Lake Trip been elected president of the Durham Police Wives Auxiliary. Central Purchasing Purchasing welcomes Paulette Giles, typist, who has transferred from the Heart Station. Cecilia Johnson, typist, married Randy Teasley, June 24, in the Duke Chapel United Methodist Church. Everett Land, senior buyer, toiued the facilities of Monarch Furniture Company and Dunn Industries in High Point and Greenst)oro on May 24. On May 26, he visited operations of the Gregson Furniture Company, Liberty, N.C. Pat Trueheait, junior buyer, has toured the facilities and operations of several regional baking companies, including Kems Bakery, Lynchburg, Va., American Bakery, Rocky Mount, and Sunbeam Bakery, Greenstxjro. Reporten Carol Pegram House Staff Office Lynda Wall, secretary, was married to Larry Daniel on May 21. The wedding was performed by Rev. Wes Aitken, hospital chaplain, in the Hospital Chapel. Reporten Mary Fendt PEP Rosye Bragg, Duke West 11, was inducted into Santa Filomena, honorary society for nurses, at Watts School of Nursing. Sponsored by Paths for Employee Progress, she will be a senior in the fall, Reporten Evelyn Fuller DR. JOHN P. TINDALL The dermatologist said he met his wife while he was an exchange medical student working in St. Bartholomew's Hospital in London in 1958. Between 1963 and 1966, the physician spent three years on active duty as a captain in the Air Force at the RAF's Lakenheath base in Suffolk. Food Co-op Offers Low Prices Where can you buy tomatoes for 30 cents a pound, peaches for 20 cents a pound and get a three pound bag of whole wheat flour for 76 cents? At the "Intergalactic Food Conspiracy." Now in its fifth year, the operation, known popularly as the Duke Food Co-op, is expanding into the larger Durham community. A new storefront will be opened on Broad Street, one block behind East Campus. With its new home, the co-op can serve far more than its presently active 300 members, according to Tom Campbell, research The Night Owl Club will sponsor its annual bus trip for employees and their families Saturday, Aug. 6, to White Lake, N.C. All Duke employees are invited on a first-come, first-serve basis and are encouraged to take swimsuits, cameras, frisbees, ball-playing and badminton equipment, according to Lucretia McCoy, president of the Night Owls. There is no charge for admission to amusement or swimming areas at White Lake. A 47-passenger Southern Coach bus with storage space for picnic baskets, games, folding chairs and blankets will leave at 8 a.m. from the parking lot behind Trent Drive Hall (Graduate Center). It will return at about 8 p.m. The fare is $6 per seat. A child under three years old may go free as a "lap-child." One seat may be reserved for two small children. The deadline for registration is July 25. For registration or information contact Employee Relations, 684-6037, between 9 a.m.-5 p.m. or the Nursing Office, 684-2432, between midnight and 8 a.m. A HAPPY FACE—]une 30 was Elsie Cooke's last official day at Duke, where she has served tens of thousands of patients and visitors from behind the information desks in the main lobby of the hospital and at the PDC entrance. That afternoon a number of her friends assembled for a retirement party at which she received l_his framed drawing of the hospital's Woodhall Building. She also received a framed caricature and poem titled, "You've Told a Million People Where To Co." She's planning to return to the hospital as a volunteer with the auxiliary from time to time. (Photo by John Becton) technician in the Department of Medicine. The co-op handles fresh produce direct from Raleigh's farm market, flours, grains, eggs, honey and cooking oils, a variety of dried beans, fruits and nuts as well as a large selection of imported and domestic cheeses. Prices are much less than in supermarkets because the members share the responsibilities of the store management and because no profits are saved by the corporation. Weighing, bagging and selling the items requires each member to help for two hours every six weeks, Campbell said. The co-op accepts USDA Food Stamps. Three members of the board of directors are affiliated with the medical center: Bob Bruce, graduate student in Biomedical Engineering; Gerry McKenzie, Microbiology; and Judy Stafford, Community Health Sciences, who is mariager of the membership committee. Other medical center employees who are co-op members are John Roby, Hyp>erbarics; Karen Sjostrom and Dr. Ed Cox of Medicine; Cathy Saylor, Blood Gas Lab; Bev Jones, Eye Center; David Robie, Anatomy; Dr. Tom Durr, Pediatrics; Judi Sheriff and "Doc" Muhlbaier of Community Health Services; Neil Sheperd, Physiology; Jennifer Buzun, Jane Crosby, Karen Wacome and Leslie Hanes of the Aging Center. Among the student membership are Marshall Plotka, Libby Schreiner and Rich Orland, School of Medicine; A1 Willistein, P.A. Program; and Dan Harris of Health Administration. For information on becoming a member call Stafford at 383-7172 in the evening or 684-6734 during working hours.