a' ■», SI. ntcKcom 6ukc uniycusity mc6icM ccntcR VOLUME 15, NUMBER 8 DECEMBER, 1968 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Dr. Knight to Speak Duke Building Dedication Dec. 9 lillilllliM ininnmi iniiiiiiiii lunnnifnS NEW RESEARCH FACILITY—Dedication ceremonies Dec. 9 will officially open the Nanaline H. Duke Medical Science Building. 1000-Foot Depth Si m u lated In Hyperbaric Chamber Duke University and the U. S. Navy’s Experimental Diving Unit are participa ting in experiments in early December to try to map out what happens to man at great pressures simulating those found 1,000 feet beneath the surface of the sea. The experimental "dive" is taking place in the hyperbaric chamber, built, with a capability for simulating the immense pressures encountered in deep ocean dives. Five divers-three from the Navy and two from Duke-are taking part’in the project. The men were scheduled to stay at the simulated 1,000-foot depth for three days to determine the prob lems man may encounter as he pushes deeper into the ocean. In addition, the Navy tested new deep diving equipment including a life support system it hopes to use for salvage purposes at 850 feet. The divers will be brought back to normal pressure over an ll-day period to avoid the dangerous bends of deep di ving. The project is one of the first satura tion dives to the 1,000-foot level. While a few other dives have been made to 1,000 feet, mostly in hyperbaric cham bers, they have been "bounced" after only a few minutes duration. None has involved extensive tests of man's physiological responses to these depths that the Navy-Duke project en tails. The five divers are Deimar L. Shelton, hyperbaric chamber operator and tech nician; Frank J. Falejczyk of Scott Avia tion Corp., working with Duke; and Lt. Cmdr. James Kelly, M. D., Chief Francis J. Smelko and Chief Murray Cato of the Navy Experimental Diving Unit. Nanaline H. Duke, wife of the Uni versity's founder, James B. Duke, will be honored Dec. 9 as Medical Sciences I is officially named the Nanaline H. Duke Medical Science Building. Dedicatory ceremonies, to begin at 2 p.m. in the building's first-floor lecture room, will include a talk by Duke Pres ident Douglas Knight. Dr. Barnes Wood- hall, associate provost for medical affairs, will present introductory remarks and the Rev. James T. Cleland, dean of the chapel, will give the invocation. The new facility, begun in May, 1966, and occupied in July of this year, houses research facilities for the Department of Biochemistry-Genetics under Chairman Phillip Handler and the Department of Physiology-Pharmacology under Dr, Dan iel C. Tosteson, chairman. "The Nanaline H. Duke Building pro vides a superb environment for the cre ative researches of scientists," according to a joint statement by Drs. Handler and Tosteson. The departmental chairmen stressed the facility's adaptability to a variety of future projects. Constructed of precast concrete pan els and Duke's traditional Hillsborough stone, the building is designed with four laboratory towers, an administrative wing and a central research area. The structure is the cornerstone of the new medical campus as projected in long range plan ning. The four research towers offer a vari ety of space arrangements to permit experiments which have different de mands, from large pieces of optical equip ment to electronic devices and comput ers. Laboratory areas have been designed to provide flexibility for modifications to meet future research space requirements. {continued on page eleven)