Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / May 5, 1978, edition 1 / Page 4
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Summer education programs spiced with variety Four special-interest programs ranging from energy conservation to alcohol abuse are planned at Duke in conjunction with the 1978 Summer Educational Programs. Coordinator Fritz Anlyan says the programs will open with a short course on "Energy Conservation in Buildings," May 15-18. The program is designed to assist architects, engineers, physical plant managers and building owners to plan, develop and implement a rational program of energy conservation in buildings. Lectures and discussions will be led by faculty from Duke's Center for the Study of Energy Conservation and by guest speakers from the National Bureau of Standards, Duke Power Co. and the American Gas Association. According to Prof. Jack B. Chaddock, director of the energy conservation center, those attending will get "a factual overview of the supply and use of energy throughout the world and be provided with new building design methods and ideas on the use of solar energy in overall energy management programs." The special schooling will continue May 22-24 with a seminar on "Federal Regulations in Higher Education." The seminar is designed to assist '(f administrators in public and private institutions to understand the various federal regulations applicable to institutions in the mid-Atlantic region. It will include university counselors from Princeton and Johns Hopkins universities, staff counselors from the American Council on Education and a Washington lawyer who is an American Bar Association authority on taxation and exempt organizations. A course on "In School Record Keeping," June 5-7, is expected to attract a group of administrators charged with developing rational data entry and retrieval systems in their institutions. Emphasis will be on systems that integrate data from admissions, registration and records, development, financial aid, business office and alumni records. The last of the 1978 summer short programs is a "Youth Alcohol Awareness Workshop" set for July 23-28. Aimed at providing intensive training in the prevention, early identification and treatment of alcohol abuse among young people, the workshop is designed for educators, health professionals and others working closely with young people. The program is coordinated with the Southern Alcohol Education and Training Program, Atlanta, and will be led by Donald R. Nelson, a specialist in alcohol awareness program design activity. Information on registration, fees, accomodations and program details may be obtained from the Duke Summer Educational Program, 06B-West Duke Bldg., Durham, 27708, or by telephone, 684-3924. I Medical center graduates YOGI BARES HIS CHEST and second-year medical student Stephen Denning obligingly checks him out with his stethoscope during a visit to the pediatrics wards April 19. Yogi Bear and his equally animated cohort Scooby Doo included Duke on their rounds of hospitals in the state as part of a promotional tour for the recreation park Carowinds near Charlotte. Most of the pediatrics patients were delighted and a few were apprehensive, but the two overgrown playmates made as big a hit with hospital visitors and staff as with the kids. Yogi will return to Duke, again with pediatrics in mind, when he joins a host of other celebrities for the Children s Classic, May 27-29. (Photo hy Parkir Herring) (Continued frqm page 2) Fallon, Linda Grace Marlow Farmer, Barbara Ann Feldheim and Robin Terry Fireman. Jacqueline Fowler, Annabaker Garber, Catherine Anne Gray, Rebecca Faye Guadagnino, Nancy Tate Hall, Suaan Loylle Hankins, Barbara Ellen Hassig, Jane Hall Heist, Nancy Susan Heller and Lisa Jane Heyer. Holly Carol Hintz, Eva Marie Hodge, Andree deVonne Hussar, Cynthia Ann Jarrett, Eliese Anna Keigler, Mary Place Kessler, Anne Kay Kiefhaber, Nancy Ann Koch, Karen Jo Lee and Catherine Ann Low. Wendy Elizabeth MacLeod, Lynn Ellen Magill, Kristin lager Maloney, Cynthia Kay Matthews, Gail Roberta Melvin, Gail Helen Miller, Noel Fiske Miller, Marcia Lynn Mitzner, Diane Theresa Moczulski and Jill Jones Moore. Margaret Ann Morrow, Mary Louise Napolitano, Susan Paige Nelson, Ann Earl Neureuter, Catherine Koplinka Nunn, Anne Lovelace Nuttle, Kathryn Jean Oppenheim, Margaret Louise Pardee, Gail Lynne Parker and Nancy Payne Parker. Patricia Mary Phayer, Cynthia Fae Rancke, Karen Joann Raney, Janice Elaine Reeder, John Tracy Rtngland, Joan Moira Ronan, Jill Ann Russell, Mary Elizabeth Salazar, Lynn McDowell Scallion and Andrea Patricia Segura. Cindy Jo Shapiro, Diane Marie Sklarov, Alisa Edwards Smith, Barbara Louise Smith, Margaret Stavely Smith, Sarah Sherman Smith, Sharon Jane Squire, Jaimee Beth Surnamer, Emily McKellar September M r ty T March • '-'OK jg 19 3° ' /tf /° " /j 2, ^ ‘8 _ ^7 29 ^5 26 ly 12 , 7 ’S 16 J. If ^ Js ^ 4°// ^ May 5-12, 1978 The Medical Center Calendar lists lectures, symposia and other activities of interest to faculty, staff and students. Notices should be sent to Box 33 54 no later than one week prior to puhlicalion. If last minute scheduling makes it impossible to send a written notice in time, please call 684-4748. Friday, May 5 12:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 1 p.m. Monday, May 8 1 p.m. Tuesday, May 9 12:30 p.m. 4 p.m. Biochemistry Seminar. Dr. Stuart Kornfeld, professor of medicine and biochemistry, Washington University, The Processing of Oligosaccharides in Glycoprotein Biosynthesis," Rm 147, Nanaline H. Duke Bldg. Coffee at 12:15 in the lobby. Seminar series on molecular mechanisms of motility. Dr. Keigi Fujiwara, assistant professor of anatomy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, "Comparative localization of contractile proteins and nonmuscle cell motility," Rm 143, Jones Bldg. Coffee and cookies at 12:15. Network for Continuing Medical Education (NCME). Program on "The Effective Diagnostic Imagining: A Clinical Workshop." View in Rm M406 at Duke and Rms D3008, C6002 and C7002 and Bldg 16 at the VA Hospital. Pathology Research Conference. Hepatocytes," Rm M204. Dr. George Michalopoulos, "Studies in Hepatocarcinogenesis Using Cultures of Joint seminar sponsored by cellular and molecular biology program and biochemistry department. Dr. Ronald Davis, Stanford University, "Mapping and Expression of Yeast Genes Using Cloned DNA Sequences," Rm 147, Nanaline H. Duke Bldg. Coffee at 12:15 in the lobby. Pharmacology Seminar. Dr. Stephen Butler, "Psychoendocrine Regulation of Polyamine Metabolism," Rm 408 Nanaline H. Duke Bldg. Coffee at 3:45. Wednesday, May 10 1 p.m. 2 p.m. NCME. See Fri., May 5, for program and viewing areas. Special MedCom showing. "Focus on Bone Scarring: A Clinical Approach." view in Rm M406. Townes, Julie Marie Treat and Bernadette Patricia VanDeusen. Penelope Ann Vetter, Lynn Waddington, Deborah Kaye Wagner, Andrea Burton Wallis, Karen Louise Ward, Terri Lynn Warner, Deborah Joane Wengert, Lorraine M. Wheeler, Barbara Anne Wickenhaver, Marilyn Irene Will and Laurie jayne Wol^. Physical Therapy The following will receive the Master of Science degree in physical therapy: Patsy Anthony, Becky Bloyer, Mike Brownstein, Randy Bunn, Jennifer Carr, Wendy Clark, Susan Cutler, Charlene Gates, Eileen Hurlie-Landin, Greg Kaumeyer ard Donna Keenan. Lynn Kisseloff, Liz Mostrom, Ann Munday, Linda Rosenberg. Rock Rusch, Lorraine Shelton, Debbie McCall Skalsky, Mary Snyder, Ann York and Janet Zechiel. Health administration Those who will receive Master of Health Administration degrees are: Nicholas Kwaku Asare, Anita Sue Baker, Irwin M. Band, Robert R. Bandy, Michael D. Becker, Richard R. Bias, Kenneth K. Boggs, Robert J. Brody, Robert E. Byrd and Martin G. Chilek. Franklin C.C. Chow, Donald Kent Clary, Timothy I. Cloiitz, Juan Alberto Cordova, R. Vincent Crawford, John G. Currin Jr., James L. Daily. Russell E. Danielson, Michael L. Davis and William H. Duncan. Marc Adrien Gelinas, Suzanne 1. Greenfeld, Keith Stephen Grundy, David Lee Gustafson, Joan Claire Hansel, Daniel Maxwell Harris, Sue Ann Heider, Craig A. Herink, Deborah H. Houghton and Jesse David Ingram. Mark Owen Johnson, jo Mauskopf, David fefferson McCombs, Pamela Ann Mears, Robert C. Montgomery, William C. Moskosky Jr.. Judith Ann Olsen and Raymond Justus Osbun. Paul Perruzzi, Stephen J. Pomeroy, Daniel D. Ristau, Anthony M. Sanzo, John Wayne Schrader, Jonathan S. Sherwin, David B. Snow Jr. and RicharH A. Snow. James A. Stinson, Larry Gerald Storch, Thomas B. Symonds. Francis C Thayer, Susan J. Tieri, lames R. Vroom, Suzanne J. Wasiolek, Deborah L. Williams, Steven Robert Winkler and Stephen A. Yenchek. BHS degrees Those students who have earned the Bachelor of Health Science degree as physician's associates, medical technologists and pathology assistants are; Linda Ann Ahrends, Lovest Theodore Alexander Jr., Sara Lynn Amedeo, Michael Edward Arrowood, Bruce Lamar Bair, Karyn Marye Baumann, Pamela Anne Beaver, Mary Herndon Berg, Michael Alan Bertain and Carol Louise Blessing. Cynthia Ann Bowers, Catherine Susan Brown, Katherine L. Burnham, James R. Byrd Jr., Sandra Elaine Cantrell, Ruth Warden Carson, Dayton Madison Click, Denise Louise Drake, Rebecca Ann Estes and Edward Harley Gaile Sr. Cynthia Joyce Gregg, A. Earl Haddock, Daniel Frank Harshbarger, Marcia Edwina Herman- Giddens, Kenda Hills, John Robert Horn Jr., James Carney Irion, Charles R. Kelly Jr., Lloyd Young Son Kim Jr., Maria Carmen LaValle and Howard C. Lee Jr. Dean Arnold Little, David Michael Lott, Norair Missirlian, Mario Narro-Garcia, Tata Lynn Odum, Don Lawrence Pacheco, Stanley Kenneth Pasay, Patricia Jayne Payne, James Stephen Phares, Elizabeth Behney Quick and Kenneth Herbert Rathey. David Allen Reeves, Suzanne McCIeish Rhea, Roger James Sanders, Scott William Smalley, Douglas Edward Stackhouse, John Tibbs Summers Jr., Margaret Lanigan Symmes, Debra Sue Teplin, Sheryl Arnold Turner, John H. Wharton and Allen Paul Willistein. Robert Lee Branch, Mary Anne Blair Riva and Patricia Bohan Willoughby completed requirements for the BHS degree in September 1977. % /
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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May 5, 1978, edition 1
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