Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / Feb. 1, 1958, edition 1 / Page 4
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Pa^e 4 Duke Hospital, InterGom over the Nation cited by tiie journal Modern MedicAne for outstandinr contributions to medical projjress. Selection of the citation winners is made by the board of editors from nominations submitted by medical school deans and by readers of the jourjial, a semi-monthly publication devoted to diagnosis and treatment. Portraits of the winners are featured on the cover of the January 1 issue of Modern Medicine. Two Duke University faculty mem bers have been named Fellows of the New York Academy of Sciences. Dr. Ilertha I). E. H))oner, professor of physics, and Dr. Prank L. Engel, professor of medicine and assistant professor of i)hysiology, are amongv 195 scientists over tiie Nation elected to fellowship in the Academy in De cember. The title of Fellow is con ferred upon a limited number of members who have done outstanding work toward the advancement of sci ence. Webster Appointed at Carolina :Mr. Alfred C. Webster has assumed his duties as Head of the Department of JMedical Illustration at the Hni- versity of North Carolina Scliool of Medicine. Prior to his resignation ef fective February 1, Jlr. Webster had beeii for thirteen years a medical ])hotographer with the De))artment of Medical Illustration at Duke Hos pital. From Far Away Dr. Hugo Garcia, safely back in Chile, still misses Duke. In his last letter, his ear, his record player and records M’ere still sitting on the dock —waiting for him to round up the e(|uivalent of .$2,500 to pay the import tax on them. And the next time you get angry because your telephone line is busy, think of Hugo—the telei)hone company says that it may be four years before they can install a phone in his apartment! Aaron P. Sanders Sanders to Argentina A Fulbright grant to support a year's lectureshij) in Argentina has been awarded to Aaron P. Sanders, director of the Duke University iledi- cal Center’s radioisotope laboratory. Sanders will visit the Institute of Physics, National University of Cuyo in San Carlos de Tiariloche, Argeij^^ tina, as le(‘turer in health physics dtu^^ ing the ] 958-59 academic year. Health ph,ysics is concerned with safety ])ro- cedTires for persons whose work in volves radiation. Accompanied by his wife and chil dren, Sanders will leave for South America next August. He will re sume his jiost at Duke the following summei-. Sanders, an assistant professor of radiology in the D\ike University ]\Iedical School, joined the Univer sity faculty in 1958. Earlier, he was I'adiological safety officer at North (.'arolina State College and associate healtli physicist at the Brookhaven National Laboratory, Uiiton, Long Is land, N. Y. A native of Phoenix, Ari zona, he holds degrees from Texas Western College and the University of Rochester. ■ KIRBY CLINIC 1946-1958 “Even this will pass away.” —Thomas Bailey Aldrich
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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Feb. 1, 1958, edition 1
4
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