Duke Hospital, InterGom Page 5 From The Auxiliary Patients, with friends or relatives, enter the portals of the Outpatient Department with many fears—fear of their illnesses, fear of the vastness of the hospital, fear of being alone. For many, it is the first time at Diike, the first time away from the comfort able confines of their well-known areas which may be very small and may be some distance away. Doctors try to allay the fear of ill ness ; Auxiliary adult and junior volunteers try to help with the other fears. How ? The patient enters— stairs go up and stairs go down— which way should he go? The volun teer Receptionist at the desk helps by listening, directing—and smiling. After registering and paying his fee, he is handed several papers and told to report at a particular place, such as ENT or Bye or Urology Clinic. He is bewildered not only because of his fears but also because of his inability to read. The volunteer Guide escorts the patient to his destination and in the process becomes a listening post. A Guide may come to work feeling that she has the w^eight of the world on her shoulders, but she will leave feeling that her w'oes are negligible. The patient and those who accom pany him have appetites. Volunteers on the coffee counter can attest to that. The patient who arrives early from a distant point is most grateful to be able to get a cup of coffee—and a smile. To be sure, there are some machines which serve cokes when fed coins properly, but most people react as a young Korean journalism stu dent does: “When T now stand in front of a machine that gobbles up my coin with that ungrateful ‘click’ and pushes me a Coca-Cola cup, I feel awfully lonely. . . . The worst is the machine that doesn’t even respond to my coin. I have never felt so helpless as when this happens. T can’t pro test; T can’t argue; I can’t even en treat. T am a complete slave to its whims!” Flinton Carden Dies Auxiliary Secretary Named N. Flinton Carden, Jr. ]\Iaky Daugherty Flinton Carden, associated with the Duke TTniversity Medical Center for more than thirty years, died in Duke Hospital May 21 following a long ill ness. Employed on September 1, 1930, as a messenger at the front desk, Mr. Carden was director of the Duke Hospital printing department at the time of his death. Mr. Carden was one of the outstanding multilith operators in the nation, and had trained many men in this field who now hold responsible positions in in dustry. In addition to his work at the Medical Center, Mr. Carden and his wife established and operated the Carden Printing Company in Dur ham. Always ready to lend a helping hand and always interested in any thing related to the employees of the Medical Center, Mr. Carden was in strumental in starting the hospital picnic and for years took the respon sibility for cooking at the annual out ing. Mary (Mrs. (Charles) Daugherty is the new Executive Secretary of the Duke Hospital Auxiliary. Born and educated in Baltimore, where she w'orked in an insurance office, Mrs. Daugherty moved to North Carolina after her marriage to Charles Daugh erty, a chemical consultant and en gineer. She has lived in Troy, Char lotte, Siler City, New" Bern, Lynch burg, Virginia; Portsmouth, Vir ginia; and now Durham. She has been active in church work and Cub Scouts. Well liked by her colleagues, Mrs. Daugherty has helped with var ious branches of Auxiliary work, and her cheerful manner, genuine interest in people and willingness to assume res{)onsibility was soon recognized. She was serving the Auxiliary in the dual capacity of Chairman of the Coffee Service and Publicity Chair man when appointed to her present post. The Daughertys have two sons, Joe, a senior at Durham High School, and Freddie, a sophomore at the same school. Our many volunteers do serve will ingly, helpfully, and lovingly. If the post is vacant, it is because there are not enough volunteers. Do you know someone who is interested in com- nuniity service? If so, call MARY DAUGHERTY, our new Secretary, on extension 3981. Or do you want the volunteers to be replaced with the cold, unresponsive machine?