Page 7 jectives 1) cultivation and teaching of medicine on a strictly scientific basis; 2) correlation of medical re search with medical training at all levels of instruction; and 3) the continuous search for, and experiment with new or improved methods of teaching scientific medicine. This means that the fac ulty and staff are never com pletely satisfied with the sta tus quo. They constantly want to do more than they have done - -and to have more than they have to do with. Consequently, in 1 94 9, the Association of Medical Col leges and the American Acad emy of Pediatrics placed | Duke among the top 25 medi cal schools in the country. Although only 2 3 years old, Duke has trained a grand total of 1330 graduates. Of these, 22 now hold full pro fessorships in other schools of medicine and 90 or more hold other academic and sci entific positions. Hundreds more are practicing physi cians. Duke also has had in graduate medical training 776 men who did not attend medi cal school here; and has be come attaining center for foreign students at both grad uate and undergraduate levels. All activities in the Med ical School, of course, re volve around the training of the medical student. This year, there are 314 students. Admissions are at a rate of about one in 9 applications -- that is, for each class of a- bout 76 students, some 700 CARTERS HOME FROM ENGLAND Dr. and Mrs. Bayard Carter returned late in No vember after spending three months in England, Dr. Car ter was visiting professor at the University of London's In stitute of Obstetrics and Gyn ecology. In December, Dr. Carter was installed as new presi dent of the American Acade my of Obstetrics and Gynecol ogy. Lots of good books asked for by patients are missing from the Hospital Library Cart. Help us find them. We lik“ to lend them but we also like to get them back. Did you record your vol unteer hours for the Auxilia ry? They make our annual report more impressive! apply. It is no small distinc tion to be selected, nor is it a lesser achievement to stay in the school. With the current enroll ment, facilities of the Medi cal School have reached the saturation point, but the need for doctors is great and even now the faculty is studying ways and means to expand the size of classes while still maintaining the high standard of instruction. To Edith(Mrs. Paul) Horton for her yeoman ser vice on the Christmas Gift Shop. Mrs. Horton desferves orchids for the many eight- hour days she spent at the shop. To Bernice Long, who received a warm tribute from the daughter of a cataract pa tient. "When another cataract patient needs a nurse, I would like to recommend one of Pa pa’s,writes Miss Louise Gilbert of Statesville. "They were all good, but the kindest and most considerate of all was Bernice Long. She couldn't have treated him bet ter if he had been her own fa ther. " To Dorothy Douglas, the recipient of the ton of coal given by Floyd Coal Company. With the true Christmas spir it, she in turn donated it to a deserving orderly. To Bob Blake, whose drawing of the InterCom masthead on page one is a real masterpiece! DR. AND MRS. FORBUS RETURN Dr. Wiley D. Forbus, Duke Pathologist, and Mrs. Forbus, have just returned from a six-month stay in For mosa, where Dr. Forbus served as a consultant for the Mutual Security Agency. He assisted in the rehabilitation of the National T aiwan Uni versity Medical School. En- route home, the couple visit ed with their daughters in Ha waii. The InterCom is pub lished by Duke Hospital and the Duke Hospital Woman's Auxiliary at Durham, N. C. 700 Students Vie for 76 Places By Mrs. Angus McBryde Statistics are usually dull, but these from Dean Davi son's office give an interesting and amazing picture of the Duke Medical School. From its beginning the Medical School--that is, the Schools of Medicine and Nursing and Duke Hospital - - has maintained as its major ob-